stay in the middle of the relationship, sharing its conditions — not above it, issuing verdicts. Presence earns the honours. Full love reading
The Leader Among the Troops
Hexagram 7 · Line 2 meaning
"In the midst of the army: good fortune, no blame. The king confers honour three times."
Shih is the hexagram of organised strength: discipline, group effort, and the campaign that succeeds only under a commander who is both capable and humane. A single strong line among five yielding ones — the general amid the troops. Water hidden within the earth is the image of latent power: the strength of a people, or a personality, held in reserve and available when discipline calls it forth.
Hexagram 7 line 2 means the leader belongs among the troops, sharing their conditions — not above them, issuing orders from safety. In your own struggle, bring comfort and reassurance to what's weakest in you and in those you lead; encourage patience, loyalty, and perseverance. Stay flexible as the battle shifts, guided by wisdom rather than rigidity or fear. Leadership of this kind is recognised and honoured from above.
The second line is the single strong line among five yielding ones — the general in the midst of the troops — and its whole virtue is that it stays in the midst, not lifted above. The "king confers honour three times" because this is leadership worth rewarding: the commander who shares the ranks' conditions, knows their weariness, and steadies the weakest rather than commanding from a safe distance. Strength here doesn't dominate; it supports. The line sits at the receptive centre of the hexagram, and that placement is the teaching — real command in a hard season looks less like a figure on a hill and more like a presence among people, carrying them by being with them.
Do lead from inside the situation, sharing its conditions rather than directing from comfort. Turn your attention to what's weakest — in yourself, the reactive or frightened parts; in those you lead, the ones flagging — and bring them reassurance, patience, and steadiness instead of pressure. Stay adaptable as things shift; don't harden into rigidity or let fear set your moves. Encourage loyalty and perseverance by embodying them. Don't issue verdicts from above or spare yourself the hardship you're asking others to bear. Command by presence and generosity, and the recognition the line promises follows naturally from how you carried people, not from what you demanded.
The change toward Hexagram 2
When this line moves, the situation travels toward Hexagram 2, The Receptive — the earth's devoted acceptance, yielding strength that nurtures and supports without seeking recognition, the power of carrying rather than driving. The link is exact: leading from the midst, comforting the weakest, adapting to the shifting ground — this is receptive strength, command in the earth's mode. The change tells you the way to lead here is the mare's way: devoted, steady, supporting from below rather than dominating from above. Follow to find guidance, carry the world by breadth of character, and the honour comes to the one who never grasped for it.
lead your team from among them — share the load, steady the strugglers, adapt as things change. Presence, not distance, earns real authority. Full career reading
choose the path that keeps you close to and supportive of the people involved, adaptable rather than rigid. Lead by carrying, not commanding. Full timing reading
Am I leading from among people, or issuing orders from a safe distance?
What's weakest right now that most needs my reassurance rather than my pressure?
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 2 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
Order at the Outset
"An army must set out in good order. Without order, misfortune threatens."
Hexagram 7 line 1 means every campaign is decided at its start by the quality of its order — the justice of the cause and the discipline of the ranks. Inwardly, begin with humility and refuse the pressure to act impulsively. Educate the troops: let every part of you understand why discipline matters. And root out the internal traitor — fear, selfishness, vanity — before you march, or it will surrender the whole effort from within.
The Leader Among the Troops
"In the midst of the army: good fortune, no blame. The king confers honour three times."
Hexagram 7 line 2 means the leader belongs among the troops, sharing their conditions — not above them, issuing orders from safety. In your own struggle, bring comfort and reassurance to what's weakest in you and in those you lead; encourage patience, loyalty, and perseverance. Stay flexible as the battle shifts, guided by wisdom rather than rigidity or fear. Leadership of this kind is recognised and honoured from above.
Corpses in the Wagon
"The army carts corpses in its wagon. Misfortune."
Hexagram 7 line 3 means defeat threatens because authority has been usurped — the inferior self has seized command, or you're carrying the dead weight of past failures, grievances, and pride into the present campaign. These corpses in the wagon doom the march. Surrender command back to wisdom: dispel anger and self-doubt, bury what's finished, and stop re-fighting battles already lost. An army cannot advance while hauling its own dead.
Orderly Retreat
"The army withdraws. No blame."
Hexagram 7 line 4 means that against superior opposition — within yourself or without — retreat is the correct manoeuvre, and there's no blame in it. This isn't flight but a calculated withdrawal: neutralise the emotions, accept the situation as it stands, and preserve your force intact. It takes as much determination to retreat in good order as to advance. Regroup, recover composure, and be ready when the moment for renewed advance arrives.
Game in the Field
"There is game in the field: it is right to capture it. No blame. Let the eldest lead the army; if the young and rash lead, wagons of corpses follow, and steadfastness brings misfortune."
Hexagram 7 line 5 means the enemy has shown itself — a real wrong invites a real response, and engagement is now justified. But the response must be led by the eldest: measured, experienced, principled. Do not let anger command the field. Address the wrong firmly, then let the matter pass quickly; grievances held beyond their moment become a mental prison, and punishment pursued with relish turns victory into the next defeat.
After the Victory
"The great prince issues commands, founds states, and grants estates. Small-minded people should not be given power."
Hexagram 7 line 6 means the war is won and now comes the settling of order — consolidating what the struggle achieved. Reward what served faithfully, but give the inferior elements no position in the new arrangement: the fears and appetites that made useful soldiers make ruinous governors. Examine, too, whether the victory was won cleanly, for gains taken by unethical means won't hold. Modesty and gradual consolidation are what make the triumph last.
Read this hexagram in context
Discipline your own reactions first — that wins every relationship battle.
Disciplined, organised effort — lead by generosity, not by decree.
Organised discipline under a generous leader wins the campaign.
Lead the household by discipline and generosity, not by decree.
Run your money like a disciplined campaign — one firm plan, no panic.
Bring the self to order — let your higher self take command.
Disciplined, organised study wins — command yourself, gain ground steadily.
Command your own creative discipline — organised effort, humane leadership.
Act only in good order — organise, then commit to the campaign.
The campaign is inward — discipline the self, then return to simplicity.
Lead the group by generosity, and command your own reactions first.
Command your own reactions first — that carries you through the change.
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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 7 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.