8. Holding Together [Union]

Above
kǎn
The Abysmal, Water
Below
kūn
The Receptive, Earth

The wa­ters on the sur­face of the earth flow to­geth­er wher­ev­er they can, as for ex­am­ple in the ocean, where all the rivers come to­geth­er. Sym­bol­i­cal­ly this con­notes hold­ing to­geth­er and the laws that reg­u­late it. The same idea is sug­gest­ed by the fact that all the lines of the hexa­gram ex­cept the fifth, the place of the ruler, are yield­ing. The yield­ing lines hold to­geth­er be­cause they are in­flu­enced by a man of strong will in the lead­ing po­si­tion, a man who is their cen­ter of union. More­over, this strong and guid­ing per­son­al­i­ty in turn holds to­geth­er with the oth­ers, find­ing in them the com­ple­ment of his own na­ture.

The Judgement

Holding together brings good fortune.
Inquire of the oracle once again
Whether you possess sublimity, constancy, and perseverance;
Then there is no blame.
Those who are uncertain gradually join.
Whoever comes too late
Meets with misfortune.

What is re­quired is that we unite with oth­ers, in order that all may com­ple­ment and aid one an­oth­er through hold­ing to­geth­er. But such hold­ing to­geth­er calls for a cen­tral fig­ure around whom other per­sons may unite. To be­come a cen­ter of in­flu­ence hold­ing peo­ple to­geth­er is a grave mat­ter and fraught with great re­spon­si­bil­i­ty. It re­quires great­ness of spir­it, con­sis­ten­cy, and strength. There­fore let him who wish­es to gath­er oth­ers about him ask him­self whether he is equal to the un­der­tak­ing, for any­one at­tempt­ing the task with­out a real call­ing for it only makes con­fu­sion worse than if no union at all had taken place.

But when there is a real ral­ly­ing point, those who at first are hes­i­tant or un­cer­tain grad­u­al­ly come in of their own ac­cord. Late-com­ers must suf­fer the con­se­quences, for in hold­ing to­geth­er the ques­tion of the right time is also im­por­tant. Re­la­tion­ships are formed and firm­ly es­tab­lished ac­cord­ing to def­i­nite inner laws. Com­mon ex­pe­ri­ences strength­en these ties, and he who comes too late to share in these basic ex­pe­ri­ences must suf­fer for it if, as a strag­gler, he finds the door locked.

If a man has rec­og­nized the ne­ces­si­ty for union and does not feel strong enough to func­tion as the cen­ter, it is his duty to be­come a mem­ber of some other or­gan­ic fel­low­ship.

The Image

On the earth is water:
The image of holding together.
Thus the kings of antiquity
Bestowed the different states as fiefs
And cultivated friendly relations
With the feudal lords.

Water fills up all the empty places on the earth and clings fast to it. The so­cial or­ga­ni­za­tion of an­cient China was based on this prin­ci­ple of the hold­ing to­geth­er of de­pen­dents and rulers. Water flows to unite with water, be­cause all parts of it are sub­ject to the same laws. So too should human so­ci­ety hold to­geth­er through a com­mu­ni­ty of in­ter­ests that al­lows each in­di­vid­ual to feel him­self a mem­ber of a whole. The cen­tral power of a so­cial or­ga­ni­za­tion must see to it that every mem­ber finds that his true in­ter­est lies in hold­ing to­geth­er with it, as was the case in the pa­ter­nal re­la­tion­ship be­tween king and vas­sals in an­cient China.

The Lines

Six at the beginning means:
Hold to him in truth and loyalty
This is without blame.
Truth, like a full earthen bowl:
Thus in the end
Good fortune comes from without.

Fun­da­men­tal sin­cer­i­ty is the only prop­er basis for form­ing re­la­tion­ships. This at­ti­tude, sym­bol­ized by a full earth­en bowl, in which the con­tent is every­thing and the empty form noth­ing, shows it­self not in clever words but through the strength of what lies with­in the speak­er. This strength is so great that it has power to at­tract good for­tune to it­self from with­out.

Six in the second place means:
Hold to him inwardly.
Perseverance brings good fortune.

If a per­son re­sponds per­se­ver­ing­ly and in the right way to the be­hests from above that sum­mon him to ac­tion, his re­la­tions with oth­ers are in­trin­sic and he does not lose him­self. But if a man seeks as­so­ci­a­tion with oth­ers as if he were an ob­se­quious of­fice hunter, he throws him­self away. He does not fol­low the path of the su­pe­ri­or man, who never loses his dig­ni­ty.

Six in the third placb means:
You hold together with the wrong people.

We are often among peo­ple who do not be­long to our own sphere. In that case we must be­ware of being drawn into false in­ti­ma­cy through force of habit. Need­less to say, this would have evil con­se­quences. Main­tain­ing so­cia­bil­i­ty with­out in­ti­ma­cy is the only right at­ti­tude to­ward such peo­ple, be­cause oth­er­wise we should not be free to enter into re­la­tion­ship with peo­ple of our own kind later on.

Six in the fourth place means:
Hold to him outwardly also.
Perseverance brings good fortune.

Here the re­la­tions with a man who is the cen­ter of union are well es­tab­lished. Then we may, and in­deed we should, show our at­tach­ment open­ly. But we must re­main con­stant and not allow our­selves to be led astray.

Nine in the fifth place means:
Manifestation of holding together.
In the hunt the king uses beaters on three sides only
And foregoes game that runs off in front.
The citizens need no warning.
Good fortune.

In the royal hunts of an­cient China it was cus­tom­ary to drive up the game from three sides, but on the fourth the an­i­mals had a chance to run off. If they failed to do this they had to pass through a gate be­hind which the king stood ready to shoot. Only an­i­mals that en­tered here were shot; those that ran off in front were per­mit­ted to es­cape. This cus­tom ac­cord­ed with a king­ly at­ti­tude; the royal hunter did not wish to turn the chase into a slaugh­ter, but held that the kill should con­sist only of those an­i­mals which had so to speak vol­un­tar­i­ly ex­posed them­selves.

There is de­pict­ed here a ruler, or in­flu­en­tial man, to whom peo­ple are at­tract­ed. Those who come to him he ac­cepts, those who do not come are al­lowed to go their own way. He in­vites none, flat­ters none—all come of their own free will. In this way there de­vel­ops a vol­un­tary de­pen­dence among those who hold to him. They do not have to be con­stant­ly on their guard but may ex­press their opin­ions open­ly. Po­lice mea­sures are not nec­es­sary, and they cleave to their ruler of their own vo­li­tion. The same prin­ci­ple of free­dom is valid for life in gen­er­al. We should not woo favor from peo­ple. If a man cul­ti­vates with­in him­self the pu­ri­ty and the strength that are nec­es­sary for one who is the cen­ter of a fel­low­ship, those who are meant for him come of their own ac­cord.

Six at the top means:
He finds no head for holding together.
Misfortune.

The head is the be­gin­ning. If the be­gin­ning is not right, there is no hope of a right end­ing. If we have missed the right mo­ment for union and go on hes­i­tat­ing to give com­plete and full de­vo­tion, we shall re­gret the error when it is too late.