modesty joined to steady warmth pays off in every direction at once — the inner work and the outer closeness land together. Full love reading
Three Kinds of Game
Hexagram 57 · Line 4 meaning
"Remorse vanishes. In the hunt, three kinds of game are taken."
Sun is wind doubled: the power that moves nothing by force and everything by persistence. One gust rearranges nothing; wind that blows the same direction day upon day reshapes coastlines, bends forests, wears down mountains. So with influence: a single dramatic intervention accomplishes little, while consistent, correct inner thoughts — firm in conviction, soft in manner — penetrate where no argument could.
Hexagram 57 line 4 means the gentle way is vindicated. Modesty, independence, and correctness, held steadily, have mastered the inner negativity — and now the outer results arrive in threes. Remorse vanishes. Inner work and outer success were never separate accounts; resolve the root, and the branches come down together, supplying everything you actually need.
The hunt that takes three kinds of game is the old image of complete provision: enough for the sacrifice, enough for guests, enough for the household larder. Nothing is scattered or wasted. As the fourth line — the place near the ruler, where showing off is fatal — success comes precisely because it isn't grasped at; energy is joined to humility, and humility is what lets the catch be whole. The remorse that vanishes is the doubt that gentleness could ever be effective. It can, once its inner root is clean.
Do trust the quiet work you've been doing and let it show in results — you've earned the triple catch by clearing the inner ground first. Keep the modesty that made it possible; don't celebrate by grasping or parading, which is exactly the fourth line's danger. Take what the moment genuinely provides — offering, hospitality, provision — and no more. The counsel is to receive fully and stay humble, because it was the humility that made the fullness possible.
The change toward Hexagram 44
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 44, Coming to Meet. Abundance is exactly when something inferior slips quietly back in from below, charming and easy. The triple catch is real — but Coming to Meet warns that success invites the seductive shortcut, the flattering compromise, the bold thing that advertises its danger by its very ease. Meet what arrives courteously; do not marry it. Keep the modesty that won the hunt, and don't let victory open the door you just worked to close.
quiet competence held steadily now bears fruit on every front; take the results and keep the humility that earned them. Full career reading
act — the ground is ready; the inner work is done and the moment supplies what you need. Move with quiet confidence. Full timing reading
Where has my quiet inner work started paying off in ways I've been slow to notice?
Can I receive this fullness without immediately grasping for more?
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 4 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 Warrior's Resolve
"In advancing and retreating alike, the steadfastness of a warrior furthers."
Hexagram 57 line 1 means you're wavering — a step forward, a step back, committing to neither. Softness has slipped into indecision. The counsel is a warrior's resolve set underneath the gentle manner: choose one direction and hold it. Gentle has always meant unforced; it has never meant unresolved.
Penetration Under the Bed
"Searching beneath the bed; priests and diviners in great number. Good fortune, no blame."
Hexagram 57 line 2 means the trouble is hidden and working from below the surface — old resentments, buried pride, self-pity souring things where you can't see. The counsel is thorough, honest investigation: hunt these buried influences out like priests tracking spirits, and welcome help doing it. Named, they lose their power. Good fortune, no blame.
Repeated Penetration
"Penetration repeated and repeated: humiliation."
Hexagram 57 line 3 means you've analysed past the point of use — turning the same matter over, re-deciding the decided, probing the wound to check it's healed. This is reflection that never lands in action, and it curdles into humiliation. When the fault is found, correct it; when the choice is clear, make it.
Three Kinds of Game
"Remorse vanishes. In the hunt, three kinds of game are taken."
Hexagram 57 line 4 means the gentle way is vindicated. Modesty, independence, and correctness, held steadily, have mastered the inner negativity — and now the outer results arrive in threes. Remorse vanishes. Inner work and outer success were never separate accounts; resolve the root, and the branches come down together, supplying everything you actually need.
Three Days Before, Three Days After
"Steadfastness brings good fortune; remorse vanishes; everything furthers. No beginning — but an end. Before the change, three days; after the change, three days. Good fortune."
Hexagram 57 line 5 means reform. The start was flawed — no beginning — but the end can still be sound if you correct it with the wind's care. Three days before the change, trace the fault and prepare; three days after, guard against relapse and let the new way root. Amended, even a bad start yields a whole harvest.
Penetration That Loses the Axe
"Searching beneath the bed, he loses his property and his axe. Persistence in this brings misfortune."
Hexagram 57 line 6 means the search has gone past its use. You've hunted the hidden fault so long the hunt now consumes you — resources spent, decisive judgment lost. Persisting brings misfortune. Some faults can't be pinned down, and the searching itself has already corrected what mattered. Stop digging; return to simple self-improvement and let the rest dissolve.
Read this hexagram in context
Wind, not storm — gentle consistency reshapes what force never could.
Wind, not storm — steady consistency moves what force never could.
Wind, not storm — steady consistency reshapes what a campaign can't.
Wind, not storm — steady gentleness reshapes a family over time.
Wealth is wind, not storm — the same small habit, daily.
Change by wind, not storm — small corrections, one direction, daily.
Understanding comes by repetition — wind wears down the mountain.
Wind, not storm — daily consistency reshapes what force never could.
Act by the wind's method — small, steady, repeated, in one direction.
The wind's way — gentle consistency penetrates where force cannot.
Wind, not storm — steady warmth reshapes a circle over time.
Change by the wind's way — steady, daily, gradual, unforced.
Two free I Ching books
Enter your email and I'll send you a free I Ching companion guide and my visual Tao Te Ching,See · Feel · Tao — both yours to download and keep.
No spam — just the occasional quiet note. Unsubscribe anytime.
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 57 in mind
If Line 4 is active in your reading, use the oracle to revisit the full pattern and any additional changing lines in your live situation.