Consulting the Book of Changes…
Hexagram 9 of 64 · King Wen sequence
The Taming Power of the Small has success. Dense clouds, no rain from our western region. Wind blows across the sky, gathering strength.
Open above, joyful — the pooled water that reflects the sky. Pleasure, exchange, the spoken word.
Pure yang. The active, generative principle — sky, time, the unfolding of cause.
Wind above, heaven below. The wind drives across heaven. Thus the superior person refines the outward aspect of their nature.
Hexagram 9 — Small Taming — names a moment in which heaven sits beneath lake. What the I-Ching gives you here is not a prediction but a posture. It says: stand inside this configuration of forces, do not flinch from it, and act in the spirit of the image. The classical Judgment tells you what is at stake; the Image tells you what to do about it.
Apply it as a frame for the next concrete decision in front of you. If the question you brought is about action, ask whether the gesture you are considering matches the spirit of small taming. If it is about a relationship, look at the trigrams — Heaven beneath Lake — and ask which of those two energies you have been overplaying, and which you have been ignoring. The oracle is rarely cryptic on close reading; it is precise about what kind of person this moment is asking you to be.
Treat any changing lines as the seam where the situation is opening into its next phase. The transformed hexagram is not what will happen — it is what this one is in the process of becoming, and the changing lines are the hinges. Read them last. Read them slowly.
If a single line changes from yin to yang or yang to yin, the hexagram becomes one of these six.