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Hexagram 38 · Line 6

The Rain That Clears

Hexagram 38 · Line 6 meaning

"Isolated by opposition, one sees the companion as a pig caked with mud, a wagon full of devils. First the bow is drawn — then laid aside: no robber, but a suitor in due time. Going on, rain falls — and good fortune comes."
Parent hexagram
38

K'uei is the hexagram of estrangement: fire and lake, dwelling together yet moving in opposite directions — two natures that share a house and cannot merge. It governs misunderstanding, divergence, the polarities that set people and even our own aims against one another.

Direct answer

Hexagram 38 line 6 is estrangement at its hallucinatory peak: perception itself corrupted, the approaching friend seen as filth and menace, the bow already drawn. Then the turning — you look again before loosing and see truly: not a robber, a suitor. Your defences made the devils, not the world. Lay the bow down, and the tension breaks like rain.

The image explained

The sixth line is the peak, the place of excess — and here estrangement has run to the excess of paranoia, where perception itself has curdled. The friend approaching in good faith is seen as a pig caked in mud, a wagon crammed with devils; the bow comes up. Then the hexagram's whole turn arrives in a single glance: looking once more before the arrow flies, and seeing that the menace was manufactured at home. No robber — a suitor. When the projection collapses, the long-held tension releases like rain after drought. This cleared, washed air is the entire hexagram's destination.

What to do now

Before you react to the menace, look again — this line's entire salvation is in the second glance. Do audit your perception: the filth and the devils are almost certainly your fear's projection, not the person in front of you. Don't loose the arrow, don't fire off the accusation, don't strike pre-emptively at what you haven't verified. Lay the bow down first, then see who is actually approaching. When the false picture collapses, the built-up pressure breaks like rain, and the air clears on its own.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 54

Follow this line and the situation moves toward Hexagram 54, The Marrying Maiden — a caution folded into the good fortune. The rain clears, the suitor is real, a bond becomes possible; but the target warns against forcing anything from an unequal or desire-driven position. Undertake nothing pushy now. Let the reconciled relationship find its footing slowly, on principle, allowed to evolve — not seized the moment the air clears. What fear nearly destroyed, impatience could still spoil. Meet the suitor gladly, then let the thing build at its own pace.

This line in context
In love

The devils were mud all along. Lay the bow down, let the projection collapse — and the tension breaks like rain. Good fortune, washed clean. Full love reading

In career

Those devils were only mud. Drop your guard, let the false picture collapse — and the tension releases like a downpour. Good fortune, washed clean. Full career reading

For a decision

Perception at its most distorted, then the turn. See truly before you act, and the built-up tension breaks like rain into good fortune. Full timing reading

Reflection

What am I about to fire the arrow at that I haven't actually looked at twice?

If these devils are really mud, what would it cost me to lay the bow down?

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 38

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 6 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 6

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

The Horse Returns by Itself

"Remorse vanishes. If you lose your horse, do not chase it — it returns on its own. When you see people set against you, guard only against your own mistakes."

Hexagram 38 line 1 gives estrangement's first law: do not pursue. What belongs with you — the ally, the affection, the lost horse — comes back on its own if you stop chasing; hounding it only drives it further. Meet hostility the same way: no counter-campaign, just vigilance over your own conduct. Most separations heal in the space pursuing would poison.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

Meeting in a Narrow Street

"One meets his lord in a narrow alley. No blame."

Hexagram 38 line 2 means estrangement has blocked the formal routes — but the narrow street remains: the accidental meeting, the informal channel, where understanding can restart without ceremony. Keep your attitude open and unscripted; don't insist reconciliation arrive by the proper entrance. When the unexpected opening appears, use it. Truth met in an alley is no less true.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

Everything Dragged Backward

"The wagon dragged back, the oxen halted, hair and nose cut off. A bad beginning — a good end."

Hexagram 38 line 3 is the opposition's worst passage: every effort obstructed, insult piled on blockage, the enterprise seemingly ruined by hostile hands. But the line reaches past appearances — bad beginning, good end. Don't let the ugliness of the moment decide your course. This adversity is a test of your inner stability, and it holds for a better hour.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

The Like-Minded Stranger

"Isolated by opposition, one meets a like-minded person and can associate in good faith. Danger — but no blame."

Hexagram 38 line 4 finds you in the depths of estrangement — cut off, mistrusted, mistrusting — when a companion of like spirit appears. The isolation was self-made: mistrust held too hard, guidance severed from your side. Meeting one honest spirit reopens everything. Associate in good faith despite the risk; let one trustworthy bond re-teach you the trustworthiness of the whole.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

Biting Through the Wrappings

"Remorse vanishes. The companion bites through the wrappings. Going to him then — how could it be a mistake?"

Hexagram 38 line 5 means the misunderstanding is wrapped in layers — accumulated misreadings, guarded manners, old caution — and now the other party bites through them from their side. The estranged companion reveals themselves as true after all. Answer in kind: discard the remaining mistrust, go to meet them without hedging, and let the recognition complete itself.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

The Rain That Clears

"Isolated by opposition, one sees the companion as a pig caked with mud, a wagon full of devils. First the bow is drawn — then laid aside: no robber, but a suitor in due time. Going on, rain falls — and good fortune comes."

Hexagram 38 line 6 is estrangement at its hallucinatory peak: perception itself corrupted, the approaching friend seen as filth and menace, the bow already drawn. Then the turning — you look again before loosing and see truly: not a robber, a suitor. Your defences made the devils, not the world. Lay the bow down, and the tension breaks like rain.

Current line
Situation meanings

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 38 in mind

If Line 6 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.