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07/03/07

Book of Changes - Hexagram 35: Jin

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 08:16 am , 464 words, 193 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 35 jin So, here we go with the next drive-by reading of the I Ching, with a lesson filled with sunshine and promises. Everything about this hexagram seems optimistic, although according to Wikipedia, variations on its name include "aquas," which makes no sense at all (shades of blue?).

What's the character mean? The character for jin shows two swooping birds descending over the sun, and literally means to advance or go forward (onward and upward!). Master Huang here veers away from the dictionary and says... more


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06/05/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 34 - Da Zhuang

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 04:46 pm , 550 words, 158 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 34 - da zhuangCurious why this is in a blog about Chinese adoption? Read this explanation.

OK, back to my notes on the Big Text of Chinese Culture, gleaning advice from one of the world's best sources of wisdom.

With da zhuang, we've gone from the last chapter's Retreat to a position of power. Obviously, we weren't running... more

05/10/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 33 - Dun

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 06:29 am , 538 words, 118 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 33 dun So, back to my notes on the I Ching, that cornerstone of Chinese culture. If you want to know China, there's no way around the I Ching.

After the wise advice of the last hexagram, which was all about hanging in there and keeping on keeping on, we come to the inevitable stopping and backing away. Not all courses are worth following.

What's the character mean? The character for dun shows three footprints over a... more

03/30/07

And speaking of heng...

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 01:46 pm , 71 words, 131 views  
Categories: China Today, Irrelevancies, The I Ching

So, as you may or may not know, I work in a rather odd newsroom while I'm not doing this thing on here.

While writing that previous entry on the hexagram heng and how it represents an unusual sort of marriage, I get assigned to write two stories based on news clips from China -- one on this married couple and one on this married couple.

Must mean *something*, mustn't it?

Book of Changes: Hexagram 32 - Heng

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 06:38 am , 573 words, 120 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hex 32 heng

So, we're at the halfway point. Cool. Smooth sailing from here on out, as long as we persevere, right?

This is the inverse of the previous hexagram, xian, which was about newlyweds. This one is about long familiarity and lasting-ness.

What's the character mean? The character for heng shows a heart next to a boat traveling between two shores. Oddly, I was just looking at the clickable Dao de jing on... more

03/16/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 31 - Xian

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 06:09 am , 694 words, 134 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hex 31 - xian or hsien Here we are at xian (or hsien, in the old style), nearly up to halfway through the Book of Changes. Some scholars mark this as the beginning of the "Lower Canon" of the I Ching (pdf file). I'm not really sure what that means -- why there might be two canons in the book. Master Huang says the Lower Canon starts with a symbolic marriage (between xian and the next hexagram, heng) and has to do with... more


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03/05/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 30 - Li

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 10:56 am , 605 words, 118 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 30, li

Like the previous hexagram, kan (and, for that matter, like the first two hexagrams in the whole book), this is a hexagram made by repeating the same trigram twice -- in this case, double li, the essence of fire.

According to some commentators, li and kan are what everything is made from. While all-yang qian... more

02/08/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 29 - Kan

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 06:51 am , 632 words, 124 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hex 29-kan I'm a little bit fond of this particular (somewhat ominous) hexagram, because when I tossed the coins while in the process of adopting Daughter, lo, these three years ago, this was one of the two hexagrams that came up. I liked the fact that it has the (corny, old) connotation of "a journey over water." It's one of eight hexagrams made by doubling a trigram -- in this case, it's double-water, or more specifically, double-quickly running-water, like a rapid... more

01/25/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 28 - Da Guo

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 06:51 am , 812 words, 140 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 28 - da guoSo, we're up to Great Exceeding (dà guò), and nearing the halfway point of our glancing blow at the I Ching.

Why is this stuff on a blog about Chinese adoption?

Because it's a cornerstone of Chinese (and Asian) culture, showing up on everything from bus stops to names... more

01/08/07

Book of Changes: Hexagram 27 -- Yi

Posted by : grant in China Adoption Blog at 10:35 am , 592 words, 282 views  
Categories: The I Ching

hexagram 27 - yi

Mmm. Back for more Chinese culture.

Like the last couple of hexagrams, this hexagram is associated with a tai chi movement -- in this case, fist under the elbow, which goes something like this. For Da Liu, the upper trigram ken represents fingers, and the lower trigram zhen (as ... more

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