Today: “These challenging times will require a new perspective, a new plan, a newer you, to see you through.  Be flexible. Exercise discipline. Apply yourself and you will be OK.” from the I Ching

These challenging times will require a new perspective, a new plan, a newer you, to see you through.  Be flexible. Exercise discipline. Apply yourself and you will be OK.

and then this: Tao Te Ching – Verse 5 – The Tao doesn’t take sides; it gives birth to both good and evil.

See the previous reading: Today: “Obstacles can be overcome by adjusting your direction to flow with the prevailing currents.  Expand your view, modify your character, adjust your relations. Reality will have its way.” from the I Ching

See the previous previous reading:  Today: “Be mindful of the company you keep and the activities you pursue.  Give attention to your potential for growth in each case. Free yourself from trivial pursuits.” from the I Ching

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Share The Magical Story of Mushkil Gusha over a meal with friends today.

Meditation: LA057 780928 Change your frequency

All of the following contribute to the flow of what’s happening in recent readings:

Meditation: NM0413 – Intuition and the Strength of Excellence

 

Meditation: LA101 790419-Faith In Our Self And Our Own Discipline

Meditation: LA860-960131-Increase the Flow of Earth Within You

Meditation: LA721-920325: for the Intuitive Intellect

Meditation: NM374 – 20001128 – Patience and Intuition

Still relevant:

Meditation: Breath to Conquer Time Space and Destiny

Meditation: LA088 790222 Egyptian Meditation

Meditation: Meditations for the Radiant Body

Meditation: LA907 – Kriya for Non-Reaction

Meditation: Listening to Angelic Whispers – from the Mind

See Richard Wilhelm's translation for this reading
47 – Forty-Seven.  K’un / Exhaustion

A Dead Sea, its Waters spent eons ago, more deadly than the desert surrounding it:
The Superior Person will stake his life and fortune on what he deeply believes.

Triumph belongs to those who endure.
Trial and tribulation can hone exceptional character to a razor edge that slices deftly through every challenge.
Action prevails where words will fail.

SITUATION ANALYSIS:

This is the realm of the Shaman.
You have exhausted every alternative, spent yourself completely, taxed body and mind beyond your former limits.
Survival and salvation lie beyond your reach now.
Only transcendence to a new existence — a higher plane of being — will see you through.
The Old You is just a dry husk.
You can’t return to it.
Metamorphosis is the only grace offered.
You can only return to your homeland as a New You.

yin
yang above: Tui / The Joyous, Lake
yang
yin
yang below: K’an / The Abysmal, Water
yin

 

The lake is above, water below; the lake is empty, dried up.1
Exhaustion is expressed in yet another way: at the top, a dark line is holding down two light lines; below, a light line is hemmed in between two dark ones. The upper trigram belongs to the principle of darkness, the lower to the principle of light. Thus everywhere superior men are oppressed and held in restraint by inferior men.

THE JUDGEMENT

OPPRESSION. Success. Perseverance.
The great man brings about good fortune.
No blame.
When one has something to say,
It is not believed.

Times of adversity are the reverse of times of success, but they can lead to success if they befall the right man. When a strong man meets with adversity, he remains cheerful despite all danger, and this cheerfulness is the source of later successes; it is that stability which is stronger than fate. He who lets his spirit be broken by exhaustion certainly has no success. But if adversity only bends a man, it creates in him a power to react that is bound in time to manifest itself. No inferior man is capable of this. Only the great man brings about good fortune and remains blameless. It is true that for the time being outward influence is denied him, because his words have no effect. Therefore in times of adversity it is important to be strong within and sparing of words.

Dry lake

THE IMAGE

There is no water in the lake:
The image of EXHAUSTION.
Thus the superior man stakes his life
On following his will.

When the water has flowed out below, the lake must dry up and become exhausted. That is fate. This symbolises an adverse fate in human life. In such times there is nothing a man can do but acquiesce in his fate and remain true to himself. This concerns the deepest stratum of his being, for this alone is superior to all external fate.


1. [Literally, “exhausted”.]

 

 

 

 

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