one clean, sincere act — the well-aimed courage, the honest declaration — wins the stranger praise and a place. Spend your shot on the right moment. Full love reading
The Pheasant, One Arrow
Hexagram 56 · Line 5 meaning
"He shoots a pheasant — it drops at the first arrow. In the end: praise, and a place."
Lü is the hexagram of the stranger: fire travelling across the mountain, never staying, at home nowhere — the condition of everyone far from their own ground, and, at depth, of every human being passing through a universe not of their making. The wanderer has no standing to draw on, no network to absorb mistakes; hence the Judgment's scale — success through what is *small*: modesty, caution, correctness, obligations promptly settled, quarrels never prolonged.
Hexagram 56 line 5 means the wanderer's masterstroke: entry into the new world won by one clean, correct act. The pheasant is also what you must release to take the shot — the fixation clutched too long, which becomes the offering that opens the door. Spend your skill on the right target, and praise and a place follow.
Line 5 is the seat of mastery, and for a wanderer mastery looks like precision, not force. One pheasant, one arrow, dropped clean — a stranger with no standing wins his place by a single act done exactly right, where a scattered campaign would win nothing. The pheasant carries a second meaning: the bright thing you've been holding onto, the comfort or fixation that must be released to free the shot. Sacrificed, it turns into the offering. The line unites inner intention and outer conduct — aim true within, and the arrow lands.
Do wait for the right target and take your one shot cleanly — a sincere, well-aimed act at the ripe moment beats any sprawling effort here. Do release the thing you've been clutching; the fixation is the very cost of the shot, and let go, it becomes your offering. Don't scatter your skill across many half-attempts, and don't fire early out of impatience. Align what you intend inwardly with what you do outwardly, spend the arrow well, and welcome — praise, standing, a place — follows of itself.
The change toward Hexagram 33
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 33, Retreat — the timely, dignified withdrawal. It is the wisdom that completes the clean shot: having won praise and a place, know that times of influence are always brief, and the humble leave while leaving is still easy. Retreat here is strength, not flight — withdrawing in good order to arrive rested at a better hour. Take your one shot, accept the welcome, and don't cling past the season; reserve without anger keeps the prize clean.
a single clean, sincere act — well-aimed nerve — earns the stranger praise and standing. Save the shot for exactly the right moment. Full career reading
act now, cleanly. The window is open for one precise, well-aimed stroke; spend your single shot on the right target and welcome follows. Full timing reading
What is the one clean, well-aimed shot this moment is offering me?
What am I clutching that I'd have to release to free the arrow?
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 5 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
Trifles on the Road
"The wanderer busying himself with trivial things draws down misfortune."
Hexagram 56 line 1 means a traveller cheapening himself with trivial things — gossip, petty grievances, small pursuits — exactly where a stranger can least afford it. On the road, dignity is protection: whoever cheapens themselves invites cheap treatment. Keep to what is essential and correct, tend the real duties of the journey, and let the trivial pass unboarded.
The Good Inn
"The wanderer comes to an inn, his belongings with him, and wins the loyalty of a young helper."
Hexagram 56 line 2 means the road at its kindest: shelter found, your belongings intact, and — the real prize — loyalty won. The modest, generous spirit earns this by focusing on the good in others and seeking nothing for mere personal gain. Inner composure draws outer support; carry your worth quietly, and help turns up in unlikely places.
The Inn Burns Down
"The wanderer's inn burns down; he loses the loyalty of his helper. Danger."
Hexagram 56 line 3 means presumption's invoice has come due: the stranger acting the proprietor — meddling in local affairs, bullying from borrowed height — and the shelter is ash, the loyal helper gone. This is danger, honestly named. The only way back is the way you left: humility resumed, the guest's place retaken and kept.
Sheltered, Not at Home
"The wanderer rests in a shelter, keeps his property and an axe. My heart is not glad."
Hexagram 56 line 4 means security of the armed kind: a roof, your means, an axe kept close — and no gladness, because vigilance is not rest and a shelter is not a home. Don't mistake the plateau for arrival, or let the heaviness excuse careless action. Attend to the inner weather; lighter is possible.
The Pheasant, One Arrow
"He shoots a pheasant — it drops at the first arrow. In the end: praise, and a place."
Hexagram 56 line 5 means the wanderer's masterstroke: entry into the new world won by one clean, correct act. The pheasant is also what you must release to take the shot — the fixation clutched too long, which becomes the offering that opens the door. Spend your skill on the right target, and praise and a place follow.
The Burned Nest
"The bird's nest burns. The wanderer laughs first, then laments and weeps. Through carelessness, he loses his cow. Misfortune."
Hexagram 56 line 6 means the traveller grown so at ease he forgets he is travelling — laughing high in a borrowed nest until it burns, and the laughter turns to weeping. The cow lost through carelessness is docility itself: the humility that was his whole protection, misplaced in comfort. This is misfortune — never presume on the road's kindness.
Read this hexagram in context
Love in unfamiliar territory — travel light, tread courteously.
New ground, no standing yet — travel light, conduct is everything.
The venture in new territory — travel light, trade honestly.
A guest on new family ground — travel light, tread courteously.
Money in strange terrain — travel light, settle debts fast.
Growing on unfamiliar ground — dignity is your only luggage.
Study as a stranger — small aims, correct conduct, borrowed ground.
Working in unfamiliar territory — travel light, tread courteously.
Act small and correct — you're on unfamiliar ground here.
The soul as stranger passing through — conduct is your whole estate.
New to the circle — travel light, tread courteously, presume nothing.
Between homes — travel light, tread courteously, keep your dignity portable.
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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 56 in mind
If Line 5 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.