Serve the relationship without spending your own substance — no principle bartered, no self thrown in to keep the peace. Only someone still whole can truly give. Full love reading
Increase Without Self-Decrease
Hexagram 41 · Line 2 meaning
"Steadfastness rewards; rash undertaking brings misfortune. One can increase others without decreasing oneself."
Sun is the hexagram of the fruitful lessening: the lake evaporates itself upward, and the mountain is watered by the loss. Decrease of what is below, increase of what is above — the outer diminished so the essential can grow. Poverty of means, met with sincerity, loses all its shame: two small bowls, offered truly, outweigh a hecatomb offered for show.
Hexagram 41 line 2 means help others, but never by spending yourself. Stay steadfast; rushing in to fix things brings misfortune. You can genuinely increase another without draining your own substance — and that is the only giving that holds. Trade away a principle or your dignity to be useful, and no one is richer.
Line two sits at the centre of the lower trigram — the steady inner place from which right service flows. Its counsel is a boundary drawn in the middle of a hexagram all about giving things up: here, what must not be given up is the self. Rash undertaking is the danger the line names — flinging yourself into someone's problem, catering to their ego, throwing your integrity into the transaction to buy a result. The paradox is exact: only the undiminished can truly give. Empty the well to water one field, and soon there is no well.
Do hold your centre while you help: give from the surplus, not the foundation. Do wait for the right moment rather than forcing an intervention that isn't wanted yet — steadfastness rewards, haste misfires. Don't compromise a principle or flatter someone's vanity to be of use; assistance bought that way enriches no one. And don't measure your worth by how much you sacrifice — the goal is an increase in them, not a decrease in you.
The change toward Hexagram 27
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 27, Providing Nourishment — the hexagram of what we feed and are fed by. It reframes your giving as a question of source: to nourish another well, you must have something whole to nourish from, which is why the self stays undiminished. Nourishment that drains the giver poisons the exchange; both mouths go empty. Feed from a full store, watch what you offer and what you keep, and the giving sustains everyone — including you.
Help the work without draining yourself dry; hold your standards and wait for the right moment rather than forcing a rescue nobody asked for. Full career reading
Act only if you can do it without buying the move with your integrity — steadfast and centred beats rushed and self-sacrificing. Full timing reading
What am I about to give away that I actually need to keep?
Am I offering from my surplus, or borrowing against my own foundations?
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 2 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
Going Quickly When Tasks Are Done
"Going swiftly when one's work is finished is without blame. But consider how much one may take from others."
Hexagram 41 line 1 means finish the help you're giving, then go — quickly, before thanks turns into a bond. Your work here is done; lingering to be appreciated only inflates the ego you came to decrease. And weigh the second warning: even good help can diminish the one you help.
Increase Without Self-Decrease
"Steadfastness rewards; rash undertaking brings misfortune. One can increase others without decreasing oneself."
Hexagram 41 line 2 means help others, but never by spending yourself. Stay steadfast; rushing in to fix things brings misfortune. You can genuinely increase another without draining your own substance — and that is the only giving that holds. Trade away a principle or your dignity to be useful, and no one is richer.
Three Travel, One Departs
"When three journey together, their number decreases by one. When one journeys alone, he finds a companion."
Hexagram 41 line 3 means a crowd is costing you the very thing it seems to offer. Three travelling together breed faction; the group divides down to two. But one who walks honestly alone draws a true companion. The counsel is to subtract — release the surplus attachment, and let a single real bond form in the space.
Decreasing One's Faults
"He decreases his faults — and makes the other hasten to come and rejoice. No blame."
Hexagram 41 line 4 means the most welcome decrease of all is your own faults. Reduce a defect honestly, and the person your sharpness kept at arm's length hastens gladly closer. This is self-correction as hospitality: every fault lowered lowers the wall around you. No blame — because the work here is on yourself, not on them.
The Increase None Can Oppose
"Someone increases him indeed. Ten pairs of tortoise shells could not gainsay it. Supreme good fortune."
Hexagram 41 line 5 means the harvest of sincere decrease has arrived: increase descends on you from the whole order of things, so surely that ten oracles consulted together could not contradict it. This blessing isn't sought and can't be blocked — it gathers around steadfast goodness the way water gathers in the low place. Keep choosing the true.
Increased Without Depriving
"Increased without taking from others: no blame. Steadfastness brings good fortune; undertakings prosper. One gains helpers — and no longer keeps a separate home."
Hexagram 41 line 6 means decrease has been practised so thoroughly that it inverts into pure increase — one that flows to everyone and deprives no one. Discipline has matured into generosity. You gain helpers, and the wall between private good and common good dissolves. Steadfastness brings good fortune; undertakings prosper. Whoever reaches this keeps nothing apart, and lacks nothing.
Read this hexagram in context
Less is the medicine — sincerity outweighs everything you could add.
Less is the medicine — trim the ego, and the essential grows.
Cut what's excess to feed the core — sincerity beats splendour.
Less is the medicine — two small bowls, offered honestly, are enough.
Less is the medicine — cut the surplus, keep the substance.
Grow by subtraction — decrease the ego, and the essential thrives.
Study less but truly — a few things deep beats many shallow.
Less is the making here — subtract to the essence, offered sincerely.
Give something up first, then act — sincerely, and small.
Fruitful lessening — decrease the ego so the essential can grow.
Less is the medicine — a few true bonds outweigh a crowd.
This change subtracts — but sincerity outweighs everything you lose.
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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 41 in mind
If Line 2 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.