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Hexagram 34 · Line 1

Power in the Toes

Hexagram 34 · Line 1 meaning

"Power in the toes. Pushing forward brings misfortune — this is certain."
Parent hexagram
34

Ta Chuang is strength at flood tide: thunder in heaven, four strong lines surging upward. The gates to success stand open, movement is possible in every direction — and precisely for that reason, the Judgment adds its whole weight to a single condition: perseverance in what is *right*. Greatness and power become one only where strength and justice are united; power divorced from rightness is mere force, and force at flood tide is a catastrophe looking for its moment.

Direct answer

Strength has gathered at the lowest point and is itching to push forward — and this line's verdict is unusually blunt: force it now and misfortune is certain. From the bottom position you have power but no standing, so advancing by pressure is pure presumption. Hold the energy still, restore your composure, and let others correct themselves.

The image explained

The toes are the body's lowest and most forward part — the first thing to move when we lunge ahead. Power lodged there is strength with no elevation under it, all impulse and no base. As the bottom line of a hexagram already surging with four strong lines, this is raw force at its most premature, and the oracle rarely speaks as flatly as it does here: misfortune, certainly. The certainty is the teaching. Great strength rarely fails from outside; it stumbles over its own eagerness. Power that can't wait at the toes will trip over them.

What to do now

Do keep still. The power is real, but the position won't carry it yet, so any forward push — pressuring a decision, correcting everyone, forcing your way in from the bottom — invites the misfortune the line all but guarantees. Steady yourself instead, and trust that people will set their own course without your shove. Don't confuse readiness to act with permission to act. This is the line where waiting is not weakness but the only intelligent move available.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 32

When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 32, Duration. Duration is what lasts — the enduring, self-renewing constancy that outlives every impulsive surge. The contrast is the whole lesson: the itch in the toes wants everything now, while Duration is built by holding a steady course over time. Restrain the premature push and you trade a burst that would backfire for something durable. What you don't force today, you can sustain for years. Let the strength settle into endurance rather than spend itself in one costly lunge.

This line in context
In love

the urge to make a big, forcing move from an early or weak position is strong — and pushing now backfires, certainly. Hold steady and let it develop. Full love reading

In career

raw drive from the bottom rung wants to charge ahead. Force it and you stumble; hold the power still until your standing is real. Full career reading

For a decision

don't push yet. The impulse to advance by force is exactly what the line warns against — misfortune is near-certain. Wait for genuine footing. Full timing reading

Reflection

Is my urge to move from real footing, or just from restless strength?

What would it cost me to wait until the position is genuinely mine?

Read this line well

Keep the line inside the full reading

A changing line becomes useful when you read it in the right order and keep it tied to the wider hexagram pattern.

1. Start with Hexagram 34

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 1 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 1

Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.

3. Then read the direction of change

Only after that should you compare the transformed figure and decide what movement this changing line is pointing toward.

If you want the wider method behind this sequence, read how to consult the I Ching or go deeper with the changing-lines guide.

All six lines

Read the full line sequence

Line 1

Power in the Toes

"Power in the toes. Pushing forward brings misfortune — this is certain."

Strength has gathered at the lowest point and is itching to push forward — and this line's verdict is unusually blunt: force it now and misfortune is certain. From the bottom position you have power but no standing, so advancing by pressure is pure presumption. Hold the energy still, restore your composure, and let others correct themselves.

Current line
Line 2

The Gates Open

"Steadfastness brings good fortune."

Resistance gives way and the road opens — and that is exactly where the danger changes shape. Now the temptation is to let success discard the modesty that earned it. The counsel is to persevere as though the gates were still shut: same humility, same gentleness, no drift into controlling or correcting others from your new vantage. Held that way, the good fortune holds.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

The Goat and the Hedge

"The inferior man works through force; the superior man does not. To persist is dangerous — a goat butts the hedge and entangles its horns."

This is the portrait of power misused: the goat, all momentum and no judgment, ramming the barrier until its horns are stuck fast in it. Boasting strength, forcing outcomes and overpowering resistance are the inferior person's methods, and their reward is entanglement. Holding equal strength, the superior person simply won't wield it this way. To persist is dangerous — untangle the horns and leave the hedge alone.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

The Hedge Opens

"Steadfastness brings good fortune; remorse vanishes. The hedge opens without entanglement. The power rests in the axle of a great cart."

This is the hexagram's heart — the counter-image to the trapped goat. Here resistance is removed by quiet, persevering work rather than assault, and the hedge simply opens; no horns catch. Your strength shows nothing outwardly, like the axle bearing a loaded cart — carrying everything precisely because it makes no display. Work steadily at the obstacle, correct your own errors, and remorse vanishes.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

Losing the Goat with Ease

"He loses the goat-nature with ease. No remorse."

The resistance has ended, and so should the fighting stance. This is the inner victory: giving up the butting stubbornness without a struggle, because the situation no longer calls for it. Where the battle is over, continued belligerence is only habit. Release the distrust, the defensiveness, the readiness to spar — let the goat go gently and completely, and no regret follows.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Wedged in the Hedge

"The goat butts the hedge: it can go neither back nor forward. Nothing furthers. But recognising the difficulty brings good fortune."

This is power at its dead end: pushed past every warning into the place where neither advance nor retreat is possible, the goat's horns jammed in the fence. Nothing furthers from here by force. Yet the line keeps one door open — honestly recognising that your own pushing created this deadlock is exactly what begins to loosen it. Admit it, and good fortune returns.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 34 in mind

If Line 1 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.