More I Ching art
Here are some images from an exhibition of abstract I-Ching-inspired art by Gineen Cooper.
Here are some images from an exhibition of abstract I-Ching-inspired art by Gineen Cooper.
Reading Steve Pavlina’s blog (always a good idea), I came across a post entitled ‘There is no out there’. It’s about a healer who works by healing the reflection of the other person within himself. Mind-boggling. And that reminded me of a story I heard Stephen Karcher tell – click… Read more »Synchronicity and inner work
Here’s a very, very useful online tool you may not have known about: an I Ching search from eclecticenergies.com . You can search for any word in the Wilhelm/Baynes translation, and get a neat list back of all the hexagrams and lines in which it appears. If you are trying… Read more »Search the I Ching
Rosada at the I Ching Community casually dropped in a mention of this rendering of the Yi, which I’d never encountered before. It’s image-based and allusive, and for some reason has been made even more reduced and succinct than the original.
You never know where Yi may show up. Here’s an instructive tale from a Friday afternoon business meeting. I wonder what the reading was?
Here’s another ‘non-Yi’ post I came across that strikes me as helpful in understanding a hexagram. This one from Scott Young, about lateral growth. He differentiates between this and vertical, directed growth: ‘Opportunity is critical for lateral growth. With vertical growth, you are already aware of what you aim and… Read more »Hexagram 3 and Lateral Growth
Here’s the article by David Cornfield with this intriguing title. It raises a lot of questions I don’t have the answers to. The practice of divination, in any of its myriad forms, assumes there is a particular way the world is meant to unfold, that there are forces that promote… Read more »Destiny, divination and the I Ching