The decisive effort for what you want is now — full commitment, doubt silenced. Don't half-fight or second-guess whether you asked too much; carried through, it wins what hesitation never does. Full love reading
Three Years of Struggle
Hexagram 64 · Line 4 meaning
"Steadfastness brings good fortune; remorse vanishes. Shock — the Devil's Country is disciplined; for three years, great realms are the reward."
Wei Chi is the I Ching's deliberate last word: not the completed order, but the threshold of it — every line out of place, fire and water not yet cooperating, the crossing begun and unfinished. Spring after the hard winter; the moment before the moment. The Judgment promises success and stakes it all on the final steps: the old fox crosses the ice listening; the young fox, almost over, stops listening — and the wet tail at the very end undoes the whole crossing.
This is the decisive campaign: the entrenched disorder must now be fought, with thunder's full commitment and for the long term — three years, not three gestures. The enemy within is doubt: the mid-battle wondering whether the strictness was too much. Silence it, waver in neither thought nor deed, and the struggle wins lasting realms.
After the braked wheels and the yielding crossing comes the moment for full force — but rightly aimed. As the fourth line, the position nearest the ruler's place, this is where real responsibility begins and half-measures fail. "Shock" is thunder: decisive, committed action against a deeply dug-in disorder, the Devil's Country of the far frontier. "Three years" marks it as a long war, not a gesture. And "great realms are the reward" names the prize: struggle carried through on the correct path wins the lasting reorderings that hesitant half-fights never reach. The remorse of every earlier waver dissolves in the completing.
Do commit fully and for the long haul — bring thunder's decisiveness, aim it at the genuine entrenched problem, and hold the correct path through years, not weeks. Waver in neither thought nor deed. Don't half-fight, and above all don't let mid-battle doubt talk you into softening — the questioning of whether you were too strict is the enemy inside this war. Keep the strict line steadily, and the remorse of earlier hesitation dissolves as the reordering completes.
The change toward Hexagram 4
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 4, Youthful Folly — and the turn names what the long campaign really disciplines: inexperience, the untaught folly that keeps reseeding disorder. The spring at the mountain's foot doesn't yet know its course; it matures through thoroughness, filling each hollow before flowing on. Mêng's counsel is that guidance comes to the sincere and withdraws from the one who keeps asking hoping for an easier answer. Discipline the folly patiently, teach what needs teaching, and the raw stream finds its way.
This is the long campaign against the entrenched problem. Commit wholly, hold the correct path for the long term, and don't let mid-battle doubt soften your resolve. Full career reading
If the decisive struggle is genuinely here, wage it fully and for the long haul. Waver in neither thought nor deed; half-measures forfeit the lasting result. Full timing reading
Where is my mid-battle doubt trying to talk me into softening a fight I should carry through?
What lasting reordering am I forfeiting by fighting in half-measures?
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 Wet Tail
"He gets his tail in the water. Humiliating."
You've plunged into the crossing before reading the ice — action ahead of clarity, enthusiasm ahead of insight. The wetting is minor; the humiliation is the useful part. This line's verdict is to pull back, dry off, and learn the order this whole hexagram enforces: understanding first, effort second.
Braking, Ready
"He brakes his wheels. Steadfastness brings good fortune."
This is restraint of the loaded kind — power in hand, direction chosen, and the wheels deliberately braked until the moment ripens. Not idle waiting, which rots into fantasy and drift, but poised readiness. Steadfastness brings good fortune here: hold your energy in preparation, keep the goal in sight, and the patience pays.
Not by Attack
"Before completion, attack brings misfortune. Yet it is favourable to cross the great water."
This is the paradox line: the crossing must be made — and cannot be forced. Direct assault on the obstacle brings misfortune; the crossing itself, made with gentleness and devotion, is blessed. The difference is method, not aim. Don't batter at the situation or take the outcome hostage. Let yourself be led across.
Three Years of Struggle
"Steadfastness brings good fortune; remorse vanishes. Shock — the Devil's Country is disciplined; for three years, great realms are the reward."
This is the decisive campaign: the entrenched disorder must now be fought, with thunder's full commitment and for the long term — three years, not three gestures. The enemy within is doubt: the mid-battle wondering whether the strictness was too much. Silence it, waver in neither thought nor deed, and the struggle wins lasting realms.
The Light That Is True
"Steadfastness brings good fortune; no remorse. The light of the superior person is true. Good fortune."
This is the victory line, and it names the real prize: not the far bank but the light. Perseverance through the whole passage has burned away everything false, and what shines now shines true — character proven by the crossing. Good fortune is stated twice here, because this is the kind that holds.
Wine at the Threshold
"Drinking wine in genuine confidence: no blame. But wet the head, and the confidence is lost — in truth."
This is the book's final image: celebration at the edge of the new time, wine drunk in real trust — wholly blameless. And the last warning, laid where humanity most needs it: one cup past measure wets the head, and the whole crossing's discipline dissolves in its own toast. Rejoice fully — and remain the one who crossed.
Read this hexagram in context
Almost across — the last steps decide everything; keep listening.
Almost across — the last steps decide it; keep listening to the ice.
Almost across — the venture's last steps decide it; keep listening.
Almost across — the last steps decide it; keep listening.
Almost at the number — the last steps decide it; keep listening.
Almost there — the last steps decide everything; keep listening.
Almost mastered — the last steps decide it; keep listening.
Almost done — the last steps decide it; keep listening.
Almost there — see before you strive; the last steps decide it.
The threshold — see before striving, and keep your head dry.
Almost across — the final steps decide the friendship; keep listening.
Almost across — the last steps decide it all; keep listening.
Related guides for this line
These guides add method support around Hexagram 64, changing lines, and the larger interpretation sequence behind this line page.
How does the I Ching work?
Learn how the I Ching works through hexagrams, coin casting, changing lines, and interpretation, and why the oracle guides through patterns of change rather than fixed prediction.
Can the I Ching predict the future?
See what it really means to ask whether the I Ching predicts the future, and why the oracle is better understood as guidance about tendencies, timing, and probable development.
How to read changing lines in the I Ching
Understand what changing lines mean in the I Ching and how to read them with the main hexagram and transformed hexagram in the right order.
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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 64 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.