- Great Preponderance: Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin.
- waiting and patience: Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
- Where people often read it wrong
Great Preponderance in waiting and patience: a life-based I Ching reading
Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
Great Preponderance in waiting and patience: a life-based I Ching reading
Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
- Write the question in everyday language, with a time frame if possible.
- List the facts first: what was said, what is confirmed, what is still only a guess.
- Use Great Preponderance to notice what is moving, what is stuck, and what signal would change the picture.
- Choose one small next move, then set a date to look back.
Great Preponderance
Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin.
Great Preponderancewaiting and patience
Great Preponderance presents a field where Lake stands above Wind. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
Everyday readingsWhere the situation is getting stuck
When Great Preponderance shows up around waiting and patience, do not rush to turn it into a yes-or-no verdict. A more human reading asks what is actually stuck: unclear information, uneven response, your own urgency, or conditions that are not ready yet.
The lower trigram can be read as what is close at hand: motive, resources, the last message, the mood in the room. The upper trigram feels more like the outside weather: other people, timing, later cost. Reading them together helps you decide whether to clarify, slow down, or test the matter gently.
A scene this may look like
In waiting and patience, this may look like a situation that seems promising but keeps missing one solid piece: warm messages without clear plans, a good interview with vague expectations, or a partnership that sounds exciting before money and responsibility are written down. Great Preponderance helps bring those small details into the open.
If reality is already giving steady signals, the next step can stay modest: ask one clear question, confirm one condition, or run a small test. If the evidence is thin, that does not mean panic or withdrawal; it simply means not putting too much money, time, or emotion on the table yet.
Where people often read it wrong
The easiest mistake is treating the hexagram name like an order: charge ahead when it sounds favorable, disappear when it sounds difficult. Real life is usually more mixed: maybe move, but slower; maybe continue, but only after the terms are clearer.
Another common mistake is remembering only the sentence you wanted to hear. If Great Preponderance shows both an opening and friction, write both down: what makes you want to continue, and what asks you to leave room.
How to bring it back into real life
- Write the question in everyday language, with a time frame if possible.
- List the facts first: what was said, what is confirmed, what is still only a guess.
- Use Great Preponderance to notice what is moving, what is stuck, and what signal would change the picture.
- Choose one small next move, then set a date to look back.
Continue reading
Nourishment in waiting and patience: a life-based I Ching reading
Nourishment presents a field where Mountain stands above Thunder. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
waiting and patienceThe Abysmal in waiting and patience: a life-based I Ching reading
The Abysmal presents a field where Water stands above Water. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.
waiting and patienceThe Clinging in waiting and patience: a life-based I Ching reading
The Clinging presents a field where Fire stands above Fire. Rather than giving a simple yes-or-no verdict, it reveals structure: what drives the situation, what sustains it, and where change is likely to begin. This article brings it into waiting and patience through ordinary situations, visible signals, and one small next step.