release the familiar attachment — the ex kept warm, the comfort-texting — and the trustworthy companion arrives in the space it leaves. Full love reading
Deliver Yourself from Your Big Toe
Hexagram 40 · Line 4 meaning
"Free yourself from your own big toe. Then the companion comes, and him you can trust."
Hsieh is the storm that clears the air: movement rising out of danger, the thunderclap and downpour that end the long oppression. Deliverance from difficulty has begun — the tensions are dissolving, the knots untying — and the Judgment gives the etiquette of release: finish quickly what still needs doing, then return to normal life without lingering. Liberation milked for drama curdles; the storm's virtue is that it passes.
Hexagram 40 line 4 means releasing the lowly, habitual attachment — the "big toe" — that clings so close it feels like part of you. Old comforts, inferior company, worn habits of thought hold on at this humble level, and while they hold, trustworthy companions keep their distance. Let the familiar go, and the space fills with what deserves trust.
The toe is chosen with care: not a grand vice but the lowest, most ordinary attachment — a dependency so worn-in it barely registers as a choice. That's why it's the big toe and not the heart; the things that keep us stuck after deliverance are rarely dramatic, just familiar. Line four stands near the centre of power, where what you keep close determines who will approach. The line's logic is a swap: the space the toe occupies is space a real companion can't. Empty it, however strange walking feels, and trust moves in.
Do identify your big toe — the small, habitual attachment you barely question: the comfort kept warm, the company that dims you, the tired way of thinking. Then release it, even though letting go feels odd and exposed at first. Don't excuse it because it's minor or familiar; its very smallness is why it's holding you. As the space clears, don't rush to fill it — the trustworthy companion the line promises arrives precisely because you made room.
The change toward Hexagram 7
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 7, The Army — many forces organised and disciplined under a single trustworthy command. The direction shows what freeing the toe makes possible: once the petty attachment no longer scatters you, you can marshal your resources with real order and purpose. The Army needs one clear centre the ranks can follow; the companion who arrives is part of that gathering strength. Discipline yourself first, and the disciplined support you need falls into formation behind you.
let go of the outgrown role or the identity built on a title; while it clings, better opportunities keep their distance. Full career reading
the timing says cut the small, habitual attachment first — only when it's released does the trustworthy companion come near. Full timing reading
What's my big toe — the small attachment I keep insisting is just part of me?
Who or what can't come near me while I'm still holding on to it?
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.
Read the parent hexagram first so Line 4 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.
Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.
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.
Read the full line sequence
Without Blame
"Without blame."
Hexagram 40 line 1 means the difficulty is resolved and nothing more needs to be said, done, or re-litigated. This is the shortest line in the I Ching, and it's enough: recovery completes itself in quiet. Rest in the cleared air, stay open and unattached, and let the simple absence of blame be exactly what it is.
Three Foxes and a Yellow Arrow
"He kills three foxes in the field and receives the yellow arrow. Steadfastness brings good fortune."
Hexagram 40 line 2 means clearing the field of the flatterers — the sly, plausible ideas that curry favour with your ego while seeming perfectly reasonable. Deliverance requires hunting them down. The reward is the yellow arrow: straightness and the middle way. Name the false ideas for what they are, hold the straight path, and good fortune follows.
The Burden and the Carriage
"Carrying a burden on the back, yet riding in a carriage — one invites the robbers near. Persistence in this brings humiliation."
Hexagram 40 line 3 means showing off a recovery you haven't grown into — a porter's soul riding in a gentleman's carriage. Comfort claimed beyond your actual substance invites attack: envy, presumption, and old dangers returning dressed as admirers. Match your display to what you carry, and keep modesty in the seat pride wants. The humiliation is optional, and earned.
Deliver Yourself from Your Big Toe
"Free yourself from your own big toe. Then the companion comes, and him you can trust."
Hexagram 40 line 4 means releasing the lowly, habitual attachment — the "big toe" — that clings so close it feels like part of you. Old comforts, inferior company, worn habits of thought hold on at this humble level, and while they hold, trustworthy companions keep their distance. Let the familiar go, and the space fills with what deserves trust.
The Superior Man Delivers Himself
"Only when the superior man can free himself does it bring good fortune. So he proves to the small that he is in earnest."
Hexagram 40 line 5 means the turning point: deliverance as an inward act of will. Entrenched habits of mind argue well for their own survival, and freeing yourself means refusing the argument outright — calm, detached, and completely firm. And the firmness must be visible: the inferior elements retreat only when they see the resolve is genuinely real.
Shooting the Hawk on the Wall
"The prince shoots the hawk on the high wall — and brings it down. Everything furthers."
Hexagram 40 line 6 means the final obstruction is at last in range — the hawk on the high wall, the entrenched influence that survived every gentler remedy. The shot is available now because all your earlier self-freeing readied the arrow. Release the last resistance with one clean, decisive act. The hawk falls, the wall stands harmless, and everything furthers.
Read this hexagram in context
The tension breaks — forgive quickly, and don't relive the storm.
The pressure breaks — finish quickly, let it go, don't relive it.
The crisis breaks — resolve the last of it, then move on.
The household tension breaks — forgive quickly, don't relive the storm.
The money strain is breaking — finish quickly, then let it go.
The tension breaks — finish quickly, forgive, and don't linger.
The concept finally clicks — clear what remains, then move on cleanly.
The block breaks like a storm — finish swiftly, then let it pass.
Act swiftly now — the tension has broken; then let it pass.
The storm that clears the air — finish quickly, forgive completely, pass.
The tension breaks — forgive quickly, and don't relive the storm.
The tension breaks at last — finish quickly, forgive, and pass.
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A quiet place to keep returning
Beyond a single reading: True Essence is a daily pause to steady the mind and return to clearer judgement — a seven-day return, free to begin, then a practice that continues day by day.
Begin the 7-day return →Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 40 in mind
If Line 4 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.