gèn

52. Keeping Still, Mountain

Above
gèn
Keeping Still, Mountain
Below
gèn
Keeping Still, Mountain

The image of this hexa­gram is the moun­tain, the youngest son of heav­en and earth. The male prin­ci­ple is at the top, be­cause it strives up­ward by na­ture; the fe­male prin­ci­ple is below, since the di­rec­tion of its move­ment is down­ward. Thus there is rest be­cause the move­ment has come to its nor­mal end. In its ap­pli­ca­tion to man, the hexa­gram turns upon the prob­lem of achiev­ing a quiet heart. It is very dif­fi­cult to bring quiet to the heart. While Bud­dhism strives for rest through an ebbing away of all move­ment in nir­vana, the Book of Changes holds that rest is mere­ly a state of po­lar­i­ty that al­ways posits move­ment as its com­ple­ment. Pos­si­bly the words of the text em­body di­rec­tions for the prac­tice of yoga.

The Judgement

KEEPING STILL. Keeping his back still
So that he no longer feels his body.
He goes into his courtyard
And does not see his people.
No blame.

True quiet means keep­ing still when the time has come to keep still, and going for­ward when the time has come to go for­ward. In this way rest and move­ment are in agree­ment with the de­mands of the time, and thus there is light in life.

The hexa­gram sig­ni­fies the end and the be­gin­ning of all move­ment. The back is named be­cause in the back are lo­cat­ed all the nerve fibers that me­di­ate move­ment. If the move­ment of these spinal nerves is brought to a stand­still, the ego, with its rest­less­ness, dis­ap­pears as it were. When a man has thus be­come calm, he may turn to the out­side world. He no longer sees in it the strug­gle and tu­mult of in­di­vid­ual be­ings, and there­fore he has that true peace of mind which is need­ed for un­der­stand­ing the great laws of the uni­verse and for act­ing in har­mo­ny with them. Who­ev­er acts from these deep lev­els makes no mis­takes.

The Image

Mountains standing close together:
The image of KEEPING STILL.
Thus the superior man
Does not permit his thoughts
To go beyond his situation.

Does not per­mit his thoughts To go be­yond his sit­u­a­tion.

The heart thinks con­stant­ly. This can­not be changed, but the move­ments of the heart—that is, a man’s thoughts—should re­strict them­selves to the im­me­di­ate sit­u­a­tion. All think­ing that goes be­yond this only makes the heart sore.

The Lines

Six at the beginning means:
Keeping his toes still.
No blame.
Continued perseverance furthers.

Keep­ing the toes still means halt­ing be­fore one has even begun to move. The be­gin­ning is the time of few mis­takes. At that time one is still in har­mo­ny with pri­mal in­no­cence. Not yet in­flu­enced by ob­scur­ing in­ter­ests and de­sires, one sees things in­tu­itive­ly as they re­al­ly are. A man who halts at the be­gin­ning, so long as he has not yet aban­doned truth, finds the right way. But per­sist­ing firm­ness is need­ed to keep one from drift­ing ir­res­olute­ly.

Six in the second place means:
Keeping his calves still.
He cannot rescue him whom he follows.
His heart is not glad.

The leg can­not move in­de­pen­dent­ly; it de­pends on the move­ment of the body. If a leg is sud­den­ly stopped while the whole body is in vig­or­ous mo­tion, the con­tin­u­ing body move­ment will make one fall. The same is true of a man who serves a mas­ter stronger than him­self. He is swept along, and even though he may him­self halt on the path of wrong­do­ing, he can no longer check the other in his pow­er­ful move­ment. Where the mas­ter press­es for­ward, the ser­vant, no mat­ter how good his in­ten­tions, can­not save him.

Nine in the third place means:
Keeping his hips still.

This refers to en­forced quiet. The rest­less heart is to be sub­dued by forcible means. But fire when it is smoth­ered changes into acrid smoke that suf­fo­cates as it spreads. There­fore, in ex­er­cis­es in med­i­ta­tion and con­cen­tra­tion, one ought not to try to force re­sults. Rather, calm­ness must de­vel­op nat­u­ral­ly out of a state of inner com­po­sure. If one tries to in­duce calm­ness by means of ar­ti­fi­cial rigid­i­ty, med­i­ta­tion will lead to very un­whole­some re­sults.

Six in the fourth place means:
Keeping his trunk still.
No blame.

As has been point­ed out above in the com­ment on the Judg­ment, keep­ing the back at rest means for­get­ting the ego.This is the high­est stage of rest. Here this stage has not yet been reached: the in­di­vid­ual in this in­stance, though able to keep the ego, with its thoughts and im­puls­es, in a state of rest, is not yet quite lib­er­at­ed from its dom­i­nance. Nonethe­less, keep­ing the heart at rest is an im­por­tant func­tion, lead­ing in the end to the com­plete elim­i­na­tion of ego­tis­tic dri­ves. Even though at this point one does not yet re­main free from all the dan­gers of doubt and un­rest, this frame of mind is not a mis­take, as it leads ul­ti­mate­ly to that other, high­er level.

Six in the fifth place means:
Keeping his jaws still.
The words have order.
Remorse disappears.

A man in a dan­ger­ous sit­u­a­tion, es­pe­cial­ly when he is not ad­e­quate to it, is in­clined to be very free with talk and pre­sump­tu­ous jokes. But in­ju­di­cious speech eas­i­ly leads to sit­u­a­tions that sub­se­quent­ly give much cause for re­gret. How­ev­er, if a man is re­served in speech, his words take ever more def­i­nite form, and every oc­ca­sion for re­gret van­ish­es.

Nine at the top means:
Noblehearted keeping still.
Good fortune.

This marks the con­sum­ma­tion of the ef­fort to at­tain tran­quil­li­ty. One is at rest, not mere­ly in a small, cir­cum­scribed way in re­gard to mat­ters of de­tail, but one has also a gen­er­al res­ig­na­tion in re­gard to life as a whole, and this con­fers peace and good for­tune in re­la­tion to every in­di­vid­ual mat­ter.