Chi Chi / After Completion
above: K'an The Abysmal, Water
below: Li The Clinging, Flame
This hexagram is the evolution of T'ai PEACE (11).
The transition from confusion to order is completed, and everything is
in its proper place even in particulars. The strong lines are in the
strong places, the weak lines in the weak places. This is a very
favorable outlook, yet it gives reason for thought. For it is just when
perfect equilibrium has been reached that any movement may cause order
to revert to disorder. The one strong line that has moved to the top,
thus effecting complete order in details, is followed by the other
lines. Each moving according to its nature, and thus suddenly there
arises again the hexagram P'i, STANDSTILL (12).
Hence the present hexagram indicates the conditions of a time of
climax, which necessitate the utmost caution.
The Judgement
AFTER COMPLETION. Success in small matters.
Perseverance furthers.
At the beginning good fortune,
At the end disorder.
The transition from the old to the new time is already accomplished. In principle, everything stands systematized, and it is only in regard to details that success is still to be achieved. In respect to this, however, we must be careful to maintain the right attitude. Everything proceeds as if of its own accord, and this can all too easily tempt us to relax and let things take their course without troubling over details. Such indifference is the root of all evil. Symptoms of decay are bound to be the result. Here we have the rule indicating the usual course of history. But this rule is not an inescapable law. He who understands it is in position to avoid its effects by dint of unremitting perseverance and caution.
The Image
Water over fire: the image of the condition
In AFTER COMPLETION.
Thus the superior man
Takes thought of misfortune
And arms himself against it in advance.
When water in a kettle hangs over fire, the two elements stand in relation and thus generate energy (cf. the production of steam). But the resulting tension demands caution. If the water boils over, the fire is extinguished an its energy is lost. If the heat is too great, the water evaporates into the air. These elements here brought into relation and thus generating energy are by nature hostile to each other. Only the most extreme caution can prevent damage. In life too there are junctures when all forces are in balance and work in harmony, so that everything seems to be in the best of order. In such times only the sage recognizes the moments that bode danger and knows how to banish it by means of timely precautions.