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I Ching

How to Actually Use the I Ching: A Practical Guide for Modern Decision-Making

ZodiacNova EditorialJune 20, 202516 min read
i chingdivinationdecision makinghexagrambook of changeschinese philosophy

Carl Jung called it the most important book in his library. Leibniz said it anticipated binary mathematics. And you can use it tonight with three coins and ten minutes.

I've been consulting the I Ching for fifteen years. Most articles tell you it's ancient and profound and leave you wondering how to use it. By the time you finish reading, you'll know exactly how to sit down with three coins, ask a real question, and get a real answer.

What the I Ching Actually Is

Not fortune telling. A decision-making framework built around 64 archetypal situations. A mirror reflecting the dynamics of your current moment. Roughly 3,000 years old. Jung developed his concept of synchronicity partly through engaging with it.

The Structure

Two forces: Yin (broken line) and Yang (solid line). Stack three = a trigram (8 possible). Stack two trigrams = a hexagram (64 possible).

Eight trigrams: Qian (Heaven), Kun (Earth), Zhen (Thunder), Xun (Wind), Kan (Water), Li (Fire), Gen (Mountain), Dui (Lake).

The Coin Method

Three coins. Heads = 3, Tails = 2. Toss six times, building from bottom to top:

  • 6 (2+2+2) — Old Yin, changing broken line
  • 7 (3+2+2) — Young Yang, stable solid line
  • 8 (3+3+2) — Young Yin, stable broken line
  • 9 (3+3+3) — Old Yang, changing solid line

Old lines (6 and 9) are changing lines — energy about to transform.

Framing Good Questions

Bad: "Will I get the job?" "What will happen?" "Should I break up?" — too binary.

Good: "What should I consider about this job offer?" "What is the situation regarding my partnership?" — ask for perspective, not prediction.

Reading Layers

The Judgment — overall theme. The Image — practical advice. Individual Lines — specific positions. Changed Hexagram — where things are heading.

A Complete Walkthrough

Question: "What should I consider about the job offer?"

Six tosses yield: 7, 6, 8, 9, 7, 8. Building bottom to top:

Lower trigram = Zhen (Thunder). Upper = Dui (Lake). Hexagram 17, Sui (Following).

Judgment: "Following. Supreme success. Perseverance furthers." — adapt rather than force.

Line 2: "Clinging to the little boy loses the strong man." — don't cling to the familiar.

Line 4: "Following creates success. Misfortune if one insists on possession." — commit sincerely to a direction.

Lines change, creating Hexagram 60, Jie (Limitation) — whichever path you choose comes with constraints. Accept them.

Synthesis: Follow a genuine movement. Accept the limitations it brings. That's usable information.

Common Mistakes

1. Asking the same question repeatedly. 2. Not recording readings. 3. Expecting literal predictions. 4. Ignoring changing lines. 5. Consulting about trivial things.

Building a Practice

Daily draws. Journal readings and review months later. Read the Wilhelm/Baynes translation.

The I Ching doesn't predict your future. It shows you the present more clearly. Get three coins tonight. Pick a question that matters. Toss. Sit with it for a day. You might be surprised.

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