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Hexagram 61 · Line 4

The Moon Nearly Full

Hexagram 61 · Line 4 meaning

"The moon, nearly full. The team horse leaves its mate and goes straight ahead. No blame."
Parent hexagram
61

Chung Fu is the hexagram of truth at the centre: an empty, open heart (the yielding lines within) held by firm strength without — receptivity and constancy in one structure. Its power is penetration of the invisible kind: wind moving water without touching it. Truth of this order reaches even "pigs and fishes" — the most stubborn, the least accessible — because it works below argument, where being speaks to being.

Direct answer

Hexagram 61 line 4 means your power has reached its wisest phase — nearly full, and better kept there, since the full moon begins to wane. Receive the abundance as borrowed light and claim no credit. Then, like the horse leaving its team-mate, release even good ties that the straight path now requires you to outgrow.

The image explained

The moon "nearly full" is deliberately short of complete — line 4 sits just below the ruling fifth line, near the source of power without being it, and that nearness is the wisdom. Full is the beginning of decline; the moment credit is claimed, the light starts to fade. The team horse deepens the lesson: to pull true toward the way, it leaves its familiar mate and goes straight ahead. Some good companionships must be loosened, not from coldness but because singleness of direction now matters more than company.

What to do now

Do take the abundance humbly — name it as reflected, not self-made, and the light holds. Keep no ledger of your own credit. Do go straight ahead where the path is clear, even if it means loosening a comparison, a rivalry, or a companionship that pulls you sideways. Don't grasp for the full moon or announce your rise; that claim is the first breath of the waning. Move singly, gratefully, and without display.

Transformation

The change toward Hexagram 10

When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 10, Treading — walking carefully, even on the tiger's tail, by exact and modest conduct. The horse going straight ahead is treading already: right conduct is what lets abundance stay safe. Hold humility toward the source and tread lightly on your good fortune, and no harm comes. Grow careless — claim the credit, tread heavily — and the same power that lifted you turns dangerous underfoot. Conduct is the whole safeguard now.

This line in context
In love

real intimacy is filling toward fullness; stay humble toward its source, claim no credit, and release lesser attachments cleanly. Full love reading

In career

when something real is building — an offer, a mentor, a break — take no premature credit and drop the ties that pull you off your line. Full career reading

For a decision

act at the near-full phase and claim nothing; move straight ahead, humble toward the source, since claiming credit starts the decline. Full timing reading

Reflection

Am I receiving this as borrowed light, or beginning to call it mine?

Which good tie is now pulling me sideways from the straight path?

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 61

Read the parent hexagram first so Line 4 stays anchored in the actual situation rather than floating as a detached slogan.

2. Stay with Line 4

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

Being Prepared

"Readiness brings good fortune. Secret designs are disquieting."

Hexagram 61 line 1 means your truth is only as strong as it is undivided. Before you commit, hunt down the hidden reservation — the escape route you're keeping warm, the private bargain with your ego. Readiness here is inner cleanliness. Root out the hedge, and the good fortune follows.

Read line 1 in full
Line 2

The Crane in the Shade

"A crane calls from the shade, and its young answer. I have a fine goblet; I will share it with you."

Hexagram 61 line 2 means what you truly are is being heard, unseen. Beneath every presentation, your inner note — devotion or ambivalence, firmness or hollowness — sounds constantly and is answered by its own kind. Stop performing your worth; tend the hidden tone instead, and the companions and the shared goblet arrive of themselves.

Read line 2 in full
Line 3

Centre of Gravity in Others

"He finds a comrade: now he beats the drum, now he stops; now he sobs, now he sings."

Hexagram 61 line 3 means your centre of gravity has slipped outside you. Your mood is strung to another — elated at their warmth, desolate at their distance — so you drum and weep on their schedule. The line doesn't forbid love; it forbids outsourcing the self to it. Recover your own centre and stop swinging with every wind.

Read line 3 in full
Line 4

The Moon Nearly Full

"The moon, nearly full. The team horse leaves its mate and goes straight ahead. No blame."

Hexagram 61 line 4 means your power has reached its wisest phase — nearly full, and better kept there, since the full moon begins to wane. Receive the abundance as borrowed light and claim no credit. Then, like the horse leaving its team-mate, release even good ties that the straight path now requires you to outgrow.

Current line
Line 5

Truth That Links Together

"He possesses truth, which links and binds together. No blame."

Hexagram 61 line 5 means your inner truth has become the force that unites — the one power that holds people from within rather than fencing them from without. This is the ruler's line: correct yourself and you become the model the whole field orders around. But it works only unclaimed; seek credit and the binding force dissolves on contact.

Read line 5 in full
Line 6

Cockcrow to Heaven

"The rooster's crow rises to heaven. Persistence in this brings misfortune."

Hexagram 61 line 6 is the hexagram's closing warning: the crow ascends, the bird does not. Words have outclimbed the life that speaks them — brilliant talk, promises pitched past any power to keep them. Sound is not flight, and persisting in it ends badly. Shrink the words to their honest size and let the deeds catch up.

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 61 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.