The ground is prepared and the need proven — now re-found the relationship. Change made by the inwardly ready carries blessing. Full love reading
When One's Own Day Comes
Hexagram 49 · Line 2 meaning
"When your own day comes, you may create revolution. Setting forth brings good fortune. No blame."
Ko is radical change: fire and water in one place, one of which must transform the other. The old character means an animal's hide in moult — the creature shedding its worn skin because a new one has grown beneath. Revolution done rightly is exactly that: not destruction, but the removal of what a completed inner growth has already replaced.
Hexagram 49 line 2 means your own day has come — the preparation complete, the need proven, the ground made ready — and now the change is not merely allowed but blessed. What you could not force a season ago is suddenly right. Set forth: good fortune and no blame follow the inwardly prepared.
Everything before this line is its condition. Line two sits at the centre of the lower trigram — the official in the field, the inner balance point — so the day it speaks of is not a date on a calendar but a state of readiness reached within. The ego has been stilled, the humility strengthened, the case allowed to mature; only then does "your own day" arrive. The blessing attaches to the preparation, not the deed. The identical act launched earlier would carry neither good fortune nor freedom from blame.
Do act, and act cleanly. The moment you waited for is here; move on the change while the ground holds it, and keep the same stilled attitude through the deed that earned you the day. Don't hedge or wait for more certainty — that was line 1's work, and it's finished. Don't let the ego claim the victory now that action is blessed; the blessing is conditional on staying humble before, during, and after. Do what the ripe day permits, no more.
The change toward Hexagram 43
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 43, Breakthrough — the decisive push once the moment truly arrives. Breakthrough is the ripe day carried through to its resolution: the long-clung thing finally swept away, declared openly and resolved without force. Act on your day and the change gathers the momentum of a cloudburst about to fall. But Breakthrough sets strict conditions — no quiet deals, begin the reform in yourself first — so carry your day forward as clean resolve, not triumphant combat.
The groundwork's laid and the need is real — move now. Change made by the prepared carries blessing and no blame. Full career reading
Your own day has come; the same act you couldn't force a season ago is suddenly right. Set forth. Full timing reading
Is this truly my own day, or do I only wish it were?
Have I kept my ego stilled enough for the change to carry?
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
Wrapped in Yellow Oxhide
"Bound fast in the hide of a yellow cow."
Hexagram 49 line 1 means the change is real but the hour is not. Something in you wants to overhaul everything now; the line binds your hands. This is disciplined restraint before the ripe day, not timidity — the first, hidden stage of a revolution done properly.
When One's Own Day Comes
"When your own day comes, you may create revolution. Setting forth brings good fortune. No blame."
Hexagram 49 line 2 means your own day has come — the preparation complete, the need proven, the ground made ready — and now the change is not merely allowed but blessed. What you could not force a season ago is suddenly right. Set forth: good fortune and no blame follow the inwardly prepared.
Three Times Around
"Setting forth now brings misfortune; rash persistence, danger. But when talk of revolution has gone the rounds three times, one may commit — and be believed."
Hexagram 49 line 3 means you are caught between haste and hesitation, and both fail. Acting on the first surge of conviction brings misfortune; refusing to act after the need has proven itself brings danger too. Let the question circulate three full times, until necessity is settled beyond mood — then commit, and you'll be believed.
Believed, and Changing the Form
"Remorse disappears. Men believe him. Changing the very form of things brings good fortune."
Hexagram 49 line 4 means the deep change itself — structures, not just moods — and the credential it demands. Remorse disappears and people believe you, provided the revolution rests on principle rather than self-interest. Be the change's living proof before you become its agent, and even the most fixed form yields.
Changing Like a Tiger
"The great man changes like a tiger: the stripes are plain to see. Even before he consults the oracle, he is believed."
Hexagram 49 line 5 means transformation at full authority: the change is so aligned with what's right that it appears bold and legible as a tiger's stripes, needing no explanation and no oracle to confirm it. Belief is instant. When your values and your act are one thing, the world reads it at a glance and follows.
The Panther and the Moulting Face
"The superior man changes like a panther: fine markings, precise. The inferior man moults only in the face. To press on now brings misfortune; to remain steadfast, good fortune."
Hexagram 49 line 6 means the great change is done and only the fine work remains. Refine like the panther — small, precise corrections — and accept that some people will change only outwardly, moulting in the face while the substance stays. Press for more upheaval and you ruin it; consolidate steadily and good fortune follows.
Read this hexagram in context
The old skin must come off — transform this, don't destroy it.
The old skin must come off — transform the work, don't wreck it.
The venture must transform — moult on the ripe day, when belief comes.
The old household order must change — moult it, don't tear it.
Overhaul the money — but only on the ripe day.
Shed the old self once the new has grown — moult, don't flay.
Overhaul how you study — but only when ready.
Moult into new work — shed the old skin only when ready.
Big change is right — but only on your own day.
Moulting, not destruction — shed the old skin on its ripe day.
The old skin must come off — transform the friendship, don't end it.
The old skin must come off — transform, don't destroy.
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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 49 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.