The urge to make your resolve visible provokes; carry it quietly instead. Outwardly compromised, murmured about, inwardly firm — no blame, keep walking. Full love reading
Powerful in the Cheekbones
Hexagram 43 · Line 3 meaning
"Power showing in the cheekbones brings misfortune. The superior man, firmly resolved, walks alone — caught in rain, bespattered, murmured against. No blame."
Kuai is the last push against the dark: five strong lines have risen, and a single inferior line clings at the top, about to be swept away. The cloudburst is imminent — resoluteness at the moment of decision, the final removal of what has long oppressed.
Hexagram 43 line 3 draws two portraits of resolve. The loud, jaw-set version — determination written across the face — provokes and hardens what it opposes: misfortune. The quiet version looks compromised, gets rained on and murmured about, yet carries no blame. Hold your firmness inwardly, out of sight, and let it complete itself.
Power showing in the cheekbones is resolve that has climbed into the face — the zealot's set jaw, broadcasting the fight and so arming the enemy. Against it stands the superior man, walking alone: still in contact with what he must break from, splashed by that association, murmured against by allies who can't read his hidden resolution. As the third line — the exposed threshold between lower and upper — this is the strained, misunderstood middle of every breakthrough. Better bespattered and firm within than immaculate and loud.
Keep your resolve invisible: decide inwardly, act quietly, and let contact with the old situation look compromising for now. Bear the murmuring of people who can't see your inner firmness — their misreading is the toll of this road. Don't put determination on your face or in your voice; the visible jaw only hardens what you mean to break. Walk alone through the rain, and let the moment to complete arrive.
The change toward Hexagram 58
Resolve held quietly, without provocation, moves the situation toward Hexagram 58, The Joyous, Lake — openness, encouragement, gladness restored. The loud jaw would have hardened everything into a standoff; firmness carried in silence lets the air clear once the break completes. Joy here is earned, not performed: the relief that follows a resolve reached without combat. Take the bespattered road, and what comes after is lightness, not lingering resentment.
The loud zealot provokes; the quiet resolver walks the harder road and carries no blame. Don't wear your determination on your face. Full career reading
Resolve quietly, not loudly. Better resolved and misunderstood than immaculate and loud; let the firmness complete itself out of sight. Full timing reading
Am I wearing my resolve on my face, where it only hardens what I'm facing?
Can I bear being misread while my firmness does its quiet work?
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 3 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
Mighty in the Toes
"Power in the forward-striding toes — but going forth unequal to the task, one makes a mistake."
You've got hexagram 43 line 1: the urge to charge straight at the problem, felt as strength in the feet. It means eagerness has outrun your actual readiness. Marching now, before you can match the task, turns a first move into a first defeat — and a failed opening entrenches exactly what you meant to clear.
The Cry of Alarm
"A cry of alarm: arms ready at evening and at night. Then fear nothing."
Hexagram 43 line 2 means keep watch exactly when things are going well. A cry of alarm sounds, arms are ready by night — and the reward is stated plainly: fear nothing. The old habit tests the fences after dark; the almost-victorious win by staying alert, not by relaxing.
Powerful in the Cheekbones
"Power showing in the cheekbones brings misfortune. The superior man, firmly resolved, walks alone — caught in rain, bespattered, murmured against. No blame."
Hexagram 43 line 3 draws two portraits of resolve. The loud, jaw-set version — determination written across the face — provokes and hardens what it opposes: misfortune. The quiet version looks compromised, gets rained on and murmured about, yet carries no blame. Hold your firmness inwardly, out of sight, and let it complete itself.
Led Like a Sheep
"No skin on the thighs, and walking comes hard. Letting oneself be led like a sheep, remorse would vanish — but these words, though heard, will not be believed."
Hexagram 43 line 4 catches you pushing until everything chafes — driving your will onto the situation, unable to stop, unable to make it move. The remedy is surrender of the driving: be led by inner truth the way a sheep follows the shepherd. The line adds a sad truth: this counsel, though heard, is rarely believed.
Weeds Demand Firmness
"Against weeds, firm resolution is necessary. Walking in the middle keeps one free of blame."
Hexagram 43 line 5 names the hardest thing to uproot: the inferior element closest to you — the ingrown habit, the entangled tie. Like purslane, it regrows from any fragment you fondly spare. Break it now, wholly, without exemptions — yet stay measured everywhere else: total toward the weed, moderate in all other directions.
No Cry at the End
"No cry of warning left. In the end, misfortune comes."
Hexagram 43 line 6 is the breakthrough that stopped just short. Victory looks complete, the guard is dropped — and one remnant of the old wrong sits unexpelled in a corner. From that seed the whole growth returns, and misfortune comes. Don't merely say the right things; live them past the point of applause.
Read this hexagram in context
Say the truth openly — resolve it cleanly, without declaring war.
Say the truth openly — resolve it cleanly, without declaring war.
The decisive push — declare it openly, but never resort to force.
Say the truth openly — resolve it cleanly, without declaring war.
The final push to clear it — resolute, open, starting with you.
The last push against an old fault — start with yourself.
One bad study habit is ready to go — root it out completely.
The last resolute push — clear the block, then finish it fully.
Act decisively — but check your strength and finish completely.
The last resolute push — declare it openly, and refuse its weapons.
Name the thing openly — resolve it cleanly, without declaring war.
The last push to make the break — declare it, not war.
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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 43 in mind
If Line 3 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.