Ting / The Caldron
above:Li The Clinging, Flame
below:Sun The Gentle, Wind
Nine in the third place means:
The handle of the ting is altered.
One is impeded in his way of life.
The fat of the pheasant is not eaten.
Once rain falls, remorse is spent.
Good fortune comes in the end.
The handle is the means for lifting up the ting. If the handle
is altered, the ting cannot be lifted up and used, and, sad to
say, the delicious food in it, such as pheasant fat, cannot be eaten by
anyone.
This describes a man who, in a highly evolved civilization, finds
himself in a place where no one notices or recognizes him. This is a
severe block to his effectiveness. All of his good qualities and gifts
of mind thus needlessly go to waste. But if he will only see to it that
he is possessed of something truly spiritual, the time is bound to
come, sooner or later, when the difficulties will be resolved and all
will go well. The fall of rain symbolizes here, as in other instances,
release of tension.