Stop the tempting impulse — the flirtation, the first plausible complaint — at its first stirring. What two fingers hold today needs a rope by spring. Full love reading
The Brake of Bronze
Hexagram 44 · Line 1 meaning
"Check it with a brake of bronze. Steadfastness brings good fortune. Let it run its course, and misfortune follows. Even a lean pig has it in him to rage."
Kou is Breakthrough's shadow and sequel: one dark line has re-entered at the bottom. The inferior element returns — unexpectedly, charmingly, from below — and the hexagram's whole concern is the meeting: what we admit, entertain, and marry into our lives at the moment it first presents itself, looking harmless.
Hexagram 44 line 1 means stop it now, while it's weak. A tempting impulse or negative tendency has just stirred — small and pitiful, like a lean pig. Left to run, it rages; checked today with a bronze brake, it holds. Steadfastness brings good fortune. What two fingers restrain now needs a rope by next season.
The bronze brake is heavy, deliberate machinery for something that still looks trivial — and that mismatch is the point. As the bottom line, this is the inferior element at its very first entry, its weakest and cheapest moment to stop. The lean pig seems too feeble to matter; the image insists it has rage in it once grown. Momentum is the enemy here, not strength: nothing has gathered force yet, so a small firm act now spares you the rope-and-drag struggle every later line of this hexagram describes.
Apply firm, immediate pressure to the impulse at its first stirring — before it has a story, a habit, a momentum. Name it and check it today. Don't let it run "just to see," and don't tell yourself it's too small to bother with; that is exactly the pig looking lean. Steadfastness is the whole instruction — hold the line calmly and consistently now, and you never face the grown version.
The change toward Hexagram 1
Brake the thing early and the situation moves toward Hexagram 1, The Creative — unobstructed, originating strength. Stopping the dark line at entry keeps the field clear for pure creative force; let it run and that force gets tangled at the root. The Creative rewards exactly this line's discipline: firm, timely, sustained. Check the lean pig now, and the energy that would have gone to fighting it grown stays yours to create with.
Halt the shortcut or side-deal the instant it stirs. Every day you entertain it feeds it; brake it firmly today. Full career reading
The cheapest moment to check the thing is now, while it's weak. Apply the brake before momentum makes it a rope-and-drag job. Full timing reading
What small impulse am I calling "too minor to bother with" while it quietly fattens?
Where would firm, calm steadiness today save me a much harder fight later?
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 1 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
The Brake of Bronze
"Check it with a brake of bronze. Steadfastness brings good fortune. Let it run its course, and misfortune follows. Even a lean pig has it in him to rage."
Hexagram 44 line 1 means stop it now, while it's weak. A tempting impulse or negative tendency has just stirred — small and pitiful, like a lean pig. Left to run, it rages; checked today with a bronze brake, it holds. Steadfastness brings good fortune. What two fingers restrain now needs a rope by next season.
The Fish in the Tank
"There is a fish in the tank. No blame. But it does not further to entertain guests."
Hexagram 44 line 2 means the inferior element is contained — held lightly, like a fish kept but not served. No blame in that. Neither indulge the impulse nor crush it; gentle, constant pressure gains ground. But it does not further to entertain guests: keep the containment private, parading neither the struggle nor your skill at it.
Walking Comes Hard
"No skin on the thighs, and walking comes hard. But mindful of the danger, one makes no great mistake."
Hexagram 44 line 3 catches you half-resisting: unable to join the wrong thing, unable to stop circling it, chafed raw by the wavering. The line's mercy is its second clause — awareness of the danger is enough. Watch the urge without obeying it, decline to argue where arguing is the trap, and you make no great mistake.
No Fish in the Tank
"No fish in the tank. Misfortune arises from it."
Hexagram 44 line 4 is a warning: the tank is empty. Harshness, judgment and disdain have driven off the people below you — and the humbler parts of yourself — until they're simply gone. Tolerance withdrawn empties the tank, and the misfortune arrives later, when what you scorned is exactly what you need.
The Melon Under Willow Leaves
"A melon shielded with willow leaves — hidden brilliance. Then it drops to one from heaven."
Hexagram 44 line 5 is the master's touch: the melon, sweet and perishable, shielded by leaves rather than clutched by hands. Protect the tender thing quietly, keep your own light veiled, and let example do the work. What no force could ever extract then simply falls — ripe, from heaven, of itself. The gentlest line here, and the strongest.
Meeting with the Horns
"He comes to meet with his horns. Humiliation — but no blame."
Hexagram 44 line 6 is withdrawal so complete it reads as rudeness — horns out, disengaged, past politeness. When something approaches with hostility, or your own lower nature demands "reasonable" explanations of a path reason can't walk, the right move is to become unavailable. Others will call it proud and take offence. Humiliation, yes — and no blame.
Read this hexagram in context
What comes boldly and easily — meet it, don't marry it.
What arrives bold and easy — meet it, don't commit to it.
What arrives bold and easy — meet it, but don't marry it.
What comes boldly into the home — meet it, don't marry it.
The easy offer arriving now — meet it, but don't marry it.
The old temptation returns looking harmless — meet it, don't marry it.
The easy shortcut arrives smiling — meet it, don't marry it.
A seductive shortcut arrives — meet it politely, don't marry it.
Meet it, but don't commit — the easy offer is the risk.
The inferior returns, looking harmless — meet it halfway, marry nothing.
Someone arrives charming and easy — meet them, don't merge with them.
Something arrives boldly in the change — meet it, don't marry it.
Related guides for this line
These guides add method support around Hexagram 44, changing lines, and the larger interpretation sequence behind this line page.
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Begin the 7-day return →Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 44 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.