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Hexagram 59 · Line 2

Hurrying to What Supports

Hexagram 59 · Line 2 meaning

"At the dissolution, he hurries to what supports him. Remorse vanishes."
Parent hexagram
59

Huan is the hexagram of dissolving what has hardened: wind over water, breaking winter's ice into movement again. Its target is rigidity in all its forms — frozen feelings, hardened positions, the egotism that separates person from person and heart from heaven. Blockage dissolved, energy flows; hence the confident Judgment: success, the great crossing available again.

Direct answer

Hexagram 59 line 2 means resentment is rising in you — the hardening grudge, the alienating verdict on someone. The counsel is to hurry, fast, to what supports you: the fair, warm view of human failing. Reach it in time and the bitterness disperses, and the remorse it was brewing never arrives.

The image explained

Line two sits at the centre of the lower trigram — water, the abysmal — so the danger here is inward: bitterness pooling before it freezes. The image is one of hurrying, not strolling, because a rising grudge sets quickly; you run to your support before the cold takes hold. That support is a steadier way of seeing people — their failings read as fear in armour, false ideas held as crutches, hopelessness mistaken for realism. From the central place, this generous view is your natural ground; you have only to reach it in time.

What to do now

Do catch the resentment while it is still a feeling and not yet a conclusion. Deliberately widen the frame: what fear or wound sits under the behaviour that stung you? Extend the same tolerance you'd want for your own bad days. Don't rehearse the grievance, build the case, or wait until you've "earned" the right to soften — rehearsal is how bitterness freezes. Hurry to the generous reading, and watch the grudge lose its grip before it costs you anything.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 20

Follow this line and the situation moves toward Hexagram 20, Contemplation. Hurrying to a fairer view of people is the beginning of true seeing: you stop reacting to the surface and start contemplating what actually moves them. Contemplation is the reward — the wide, quiet vantage from which others' failings look less like offences and more like weather. Refuse the move and you contemplate nothing but your own grievance, magnified. Reach your support, and clear sight replaces the hardening verdict.

This line in context
In love

resentment is rising toward your partner. Run to the warmer read of them before it sets — most of what stings is fear wearing armour. Full love reading

In career

a grudge against a colleague or manager is hardening. Reach for the fair, generous view of their failings before it freezes into a verdict. Full career reading

For a decision

soften the judgment before you choose. A decision made from bitterness belongs to the bitterness; see clearly first. Full timing reading

Reflection

What grievance am I rehearsing, and what is it hardening into?

If I read this person as afraid rather than malicious, what changes?

Read this line well

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.

1. Start with Hexagram 59

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 2 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 2

Let this line show where the pressure, correction, or opening is most active right now. It is usually the sharpest instruction in the cast.

3. Then read the direction of change

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.

All six lines

Read the full line sequence

Line 1

Help with a Horse's Strength

"He brings help with the strength of a horse. Good fortune."

A rift is just forming — a misunderstanding, a first frost between you and someone. This line says meet it now, with a horse's full vigour, before it hardens into a fixed position. The whole economics is timing: what one honest hour dissolves today will resist a campaign next year.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

Hurrying to What Supports

"At the dissolution, he hurries to what supports him. Remorse vanishes."

Hexagram 59 line 2 means resentment is rising in you — the hardening grudge, the alienating verdict on someone. The counsel is to hurry, fast, to what supports you: the fair, warm view of human failing. Reach it in time and the bitterness disperses, and the remorse it was brewing never arrives.

Current line
Line 3

Dissolving the Self

"He dissolves his self. No remorse."

Hexagram 59 line 3 means the deep dispersal: letting go of the whole defended self-image — the curated grievances, the demand for control, the dossier of how you should have been treated. A task or a bond needs everything you have, and there's no room left for scorekeeping. What feels like self-loss is self-recovery.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

Dissolving the Bond with the Group

"He disperses his group. Supreme good fortune. For dispersion leads, in turn, to gathering — a thing ordinary men do not grasp."

Hexagram 59 line 4 means the highest dissolution: releasing loyalty to your faction for loyalty to the whole. Rising above the clique and its us-and-them looks like loss and works like harvest — scattering the small allegiance lets a larger, worthier belonging assemble. Supreme good fortune, and a truth most people never see.

Read line 4 in full
Line 5

The Great Cry That Disperses

"His call rings out, dissolving like sweat in a fever. Dissolution! A king abides without blame."

Hexagram 59 line 5 means the crisis-breaking idea: at the height of scattered confusion, one rallying thought proclaimed with force breaks the fever the way sweat breaks it, and gives every stray will a centre. This is dispersal's royal use — not managing fragments but summoning them around a purpose big enough to reunite them.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Dissolving the Blood

"He disperses his blood — the wounds and the danger. Departing, keeping distance, going out: no blame."

Hexagram 59 line 6 means the last, hardest dissolution — of harm itself: old wounds and the anger that keeps re-opening them. Refuse the thoughts that trigger both, keep distance from what re-injures, and leave — without blame — what only reopens the wound. This is how you lead everyone near, yourself first, out of danger.

Read line 6 in full
Situation meanings

Read this hexagram in context

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Return to steadiness

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.

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Oracle

Consult the I Ching with Hexagram 59 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.