Jiji :: Already Across
Offering: favorable :: Auspicious at the beginning : disorder in the end
Offering: favorable :: Auspicious at the beginning : disorder in the end
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Juji is about the continuity of change and questions the notion that it is possible to be truly finished or complete. When we start out, the goal is to cross a river, when we get to the other side of the river we realize that there is still more to do. The obvious end of efforts and the accomplishment of a goal, are, more often than not, the beginning of what must be done next.
Jiji is change but, like a dynasty, is a series of reigns that create a continuity of leadership.
Auspices
Everything is ending well but decline and disorder is inevitable. Do not hurry or press for completion.
Good for stepping down, inheritance, traveling in familiar places, and marriage.
Bad for new plans, innovation, and taking things for granted.
Comment
Jiji and Weiji (64) paradoxically conclude the Zhouyi. Paradoxically because these two hexagrams say that things do not end. "End" is merely one of many phases of change and, in this case, one that indicates a new "beginning."
For that reason the wisdom of Jiji is cautionary. Do not imagine that change ever stops. Things do not come to an end. When you succeed, do not assume things are complete or finished. To maintain success is no easy matter. When we are triumphant, we are fated to have the same decline and loss as our predecessor.
The Zhouyi concludes by saying, "Life goes on, new directions open up, and others take charge, in the great continuity of change."
Other Correspondences
Business: Liquidating assets, retirement, collecting receivables on long-term investment.
Disharmonies: Premature aging, senility, yin and yang deficiency, and stress-related trauma.
Prognosis: Fair. The patient improves, but relapses.