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Clarity's I Ching Newsletter: Issue 69

"Although it may look like a yellow submarine we are really living in an oracle"
Martin Giepmans (at the I Ching Community)


This issue:


Letter from the Editor

Dear Subscriber,
 
It's that time of year again: the season of peace, goodwill and help, can that really be the date already? And this is when I usually come up with some original gift suggestions for the people in your life who are interested in self-discovery as well as socks.

First, Holisticshop, my personal favourite store for all things 'New Age'-ish, has started shipping to Europe and the US. (They process orders at lightning speed, so there is still time to get things by Christmas if you're interested.) There are beautiful crystal rune sets in the divination section , a huge separate tarot section with big, silk reading cloths that could also be used for I Ching readings, and original silver jewellery... Go see. Oh, also see the jade dragons (amongst many other things) at Mercury Treasures. I just exchanged links with them, and spent far too long browsing.

For more Yi-related gifts, Stephen Karcher's I Ching Kit (also in the UK) is still the best way to introduce someone to Yi... that, or maybe a Clarity gift certificate? If the 'Kit' is getting hard to find, the translation it includes has been re-issued as I Ching Plain and Simple (also in the UK and Canada). And you can get the  yarrow stalks (real ones, these) separately.

If you know (or are) a devoted I Ching enthusiast who already has full bookshelves, one very interesting new book s/he probably doesn't have yet is Yijing Wondering and Wandering by Jane Schorre and Carrin Dunne. I was lucky enough to get a review copy of this - and after I've studied it more over the Christmas break, I'll write you a full review. Meanwhile suffice to say that it's an utterly intriguing collection of insights into hexagram pairs, title characters, Daoism, Yijing structure and sequence, nuclear hexagrams... definitely one to add to your Amazon wishlist.

Anyway... no audio message this time, sorry, as I wanted to get this one out to you in time for the links to be useful still. But there is an article on hexagram 13, creating Harmony among People (seemed seasonal!), and a small DIY corner.

warm wishes,
Hilary
 

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DIY Corner: Different perspectives

Two questions I'm quite often asked:
"Can you cast the hexagram for someone else? Doesn't that mean that the hexagram will be for you, not for them?"
"Can I cast the hexagram for myself? Doesn't that mean that my own desires will bias the reading's outcome?"

I think that both these questions come from the same basic conception of divination with Yi: that it's tricky, elusive, with a bunch of hoops you have to jump through to get a genuine answer. I've found that you can cast hexagrams for yourself or for someone else, and the answer will be just as genuine.

Some people seem to think that the light of truth is hidden in a box somewhere - or maybe in a whole series of boxes - and you have to find exactly the right key(s) to get in. I rather see it the other way round: we live in the box, and the light is shining on it from all sides - it'll pour in through any window we open, and glimmers will keep on finding their way in through the cracks no matter how much we try to seal them.



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Hexagram of the Month: 13, People in Harmony ˜

 
I think the name of this hexagram would be better translated as 'Creating harmony between people'. Just looking at the moving lines reveals that peace, love and harmony are not foregone conclusions in this hexagram - and that, I think, is precisely why its creative potential is so great.

tong renLiSe's site says that the old character for tong, harmony, means perhaps a box and its lid, probably a mould used for casting. So it is a sign of people fitting together well, or of people made in the same image, but at all events of something that is designed, rather than 'just happening'. It means sharing, having things in common, agreeing - and is also the name of a 12-yearly meeting of feudal lords.

In readings about relationships of all kinds, this is a hexagram for co-operation. In romantic relationships, think of building friendship and enjoying one another's company; in business readings, think of joint ventures, and getting out of the competitive, win-lose mindset.

Once in a while, this hexagram refers to the relationships within people as well as those between people. They can be relationships between inner voices (adult and child, for instance), or between different traditions and ways of knowing. Then tong would involve bringing all of these together in inner conversation.

'People in harmony in the wilds: creating success. 
Harvest in crossing the great river. 
Harvest in a noble one’s constancy.'

Where and what are 'the wilds'?
In SJ Marshall's Mandate of Heaven you can actually see where they might be on a map: the wilds of Mu, where King Wu is said to have gathered all his newly-allied troops to address them before the final battle against the Shang.

For me, the key is that the wilds are open: way beyond the familiar physical and mental boundaries of 'people like us'. So the people who create harmony in the wilds are deliberately meeting on neutral ground, and radically expanding their whole idea of who 'people like us' might be. By 'crossing the great river' they take the risk of going outside their own familiar territory into the unknown. They'll need the 'noble one's constancy' to make the most of the opportunity: not just dogged conservatism, but imaginative persistence that takes the longer view.

The sequence from hexagram 12, Obstruction or Standstill, has a lot to say about what is achieved in hexagram 13. In the time of Obstruction, there could be no communication at all, because of the 'non-people'. Or rather, I think, because of an 'us versus them' mentality that could categorise some people as 'beyond the pale', not true individuals. Now, there are no 'non-people'. And whereas in the trigrams of hexagram 12, the earth fell away below and heaven rose mutely above, now there is fire below flaming up to join with heaven, reflecting the lights that already shine there.

:::|||
Hexagram 12:
earth below heaven
|:||||
Hexagram 13:
fire below heaven

Fire represents human consciousness, our inventiveness and our capacity for 'holding together' and understanding. When communication can't happen effortlessly (as it does in hexagram 11), then hexagram 13 shows what it takes:

‘Heaven joins with fire. People in harmony.
In the same way, the noble one sorts the clans and differentiates between people.’

I imagine the clans gathering around the fire under the night sky, and the noble one using clarity of vision to keep the peace. It's interesting that he does so by recognising differences first, and how they come from people's clannish roots. Differences need acknowledging and respecting before people's natural defensiveness can be disarmed. (The hidden core of this hexagram is 44, Coupling, showing how joining with very different people can have far-reaching consequences and stir up ancient fears.)

The direction and purpose of all this work is the paired hexagram, Great Possession (14): creating something immeasurably greater than the sum of its parts. Hexagram 14 shows how true wealth is found in exchange; Hexagram 13 creates the environment where this becomes possible.

One final note. A member of the I Ching Community asked Yi before the US election how feasible it was for Kerry to win, and received 13 changing to 14. With hindsight, he doesn't quite know what to make of this answer, and neither do I. But I just wonder...

13, line 2:
'People in harmony in the ancestral hall.
Shame.'

13, line 5:
'People in harmony first cry out and weep, then afterwards they laugh.
Great leaders direct their coming together.'

OK, that's more political than I'd normally let myself get. Just wanted to share this one.


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I'm not sure whether the next subscriber's reading will be later this month or in January. But whenever it comes, if you'd like your question in the draw please email it to freereadingrequest@onlineClarity.co.uk along with plenty of background information.


Links to explore

 
From the I Ching Community:

And beyond:
Chris Gait, one of those wonderful online Yi people, has started up not one but two Yi-related blogs. Brave man. You can find them (and encourage him) at the Daily Auspice and the American Auspice.


I Ching services

I provide personal I Ching readings from £25. All readings are completely private and unconditionally guaranteed.
Clarity's I Ching correspondence course is available for £22.50 for the self-study version, or £137 for the full course including personal tuition, with the same unconditional guarantee.


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