Blount International – BLT – under CEO Joshua L. Collins

Blount International – BLT – under CEO Joshua L. Collins

Blount International  – BLT – under CEO Joshua L. Collins 

 

 

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HEXAGRAM 28 – Ta Kuo – Preponderance of the Great

 

Above        TUI   THE JOUYOUS, LAKE

Below         SUN  THE GENTLE, WIND, WOOD

 

This hexagram consists of four strong lines inside and two weak lines outside.  When the strong are outside and the weak inside, all is well and there is nothing out of balance, nothing extraordinary in the situation.  Here, however, the opposite is the case.  The hexagram represents a beam that is thick and heavy in the middle but too weak at the ends.  This is a condition that cannot last; it must be changed, must pass, or misfortune will result.

 

 

THE JUDGMENT

 

PREPONDERANCE OF THE GREAT.

The ridgepole sags to the breaking point. 

It furthers one to have somewhere to go. 

Success.

 

The weight of the great is excessive.  The load is too heavy for the strength of the supports.  The ridgepole, on which the whole roof rests, sags to the breaking point, because its supporting ends are too weak for the load they bear.  It is an exceptional time and situation; therefore extraordinary measures are demanded.  It is necessary to find a way of transition as quickly as possible, and to take action.  This promises success.  For although the strong element is in excess, it is in the middle, that is, at the center of gravity, so that a revolution is not to be feared.  Nothing is to be achieved by forcible measures. 

 

The problem must be solved by gentle penetration to the meaning of the situation (as is suggested by the attribute of the inner trigram, Sun); then the change-over to other conditions will be successful.  It demands real superiority; therefore the time when the great preponderates is a momentous time.

 

 

THE IMAGE

 

The lake rises above the trees: The image Of PREPONDERANCE OF THE GREAT.

Thus the superior man, when he stands alone,

Is unconcerned,

And if he has to renounce the world,

He is undaunted.

 

Extraordinary times when the great preponderates are like flood times when the lake rises over the treetops.  But such conditions are temporary.  The two trigrams indicate the attitude proper to such exceptional times: the symbol of the trigram Sun is the tree, which stands firm even though it stands alone, and the attribute of Tui is joyousness, which remains undaunted even if it must renounce the world.

 

 

More comments on Blount International  – BLT – under CEO Joshua L. Collins 

 

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HEXAGRAM 60 – Chieh – Limitation

 

 

Above        K’AN  THE ABYSMAL, WATER

Below         TUI   THE JOYOUS, LAKE

 

 

A lake occupies a limited space.  When more water comes into it, it overflows.  Therefore limits must be set for the water. The image shows water below and water above, with the firmament between them as a limit.

 

The Chinese word for limitation really denotes the joints that divide a bamboo stalk.  In relation to ordinary life it means the thrift that sets fixed limits upon expenditures.  In relation to the moral sphere it means the fixed limits that the superior man sets upon his actions – the limits of loyalty and disinterestedness.

 

 

THE JUDGMENT

 

LIMITATION. 

Success. 

Galling limitation must not be persevered in.

 

Limitations are troublesome, but they are effective.  If we live economically in normal times, we are prepared for times of want.  To be sparing saves us from humiliation.  Limitations are also indispensable in the regulation of world conditions.  In nature there are fixed limits for summer and winter, day and night, and these limits give the year its meaning.  In the same way, economy, by setting fixed limits upon expenditures, acts to preserve property and prevent injury to the people.

 

But in limitation we must observe due measure. If a man should seek to impose galling limitations upon his own nature, it would be injurious.  And if he should go too far in imposing limitations on others, they would rebel.  Therefore it is necessary to set limits even upon limitations

 

 

THE IMAGE

 

Water over lake: the image of LIMITATION.

Thus the superior man 

Creates number and measure,

And examines the nature of virtue and correct conduct.

 

A lake is something limited.  Water is inexhaustible.  A lake can contain only a definite amount of the infinite quantity of water; this is its peculiarity.  In human life too the individual achieves significance through discrimination and the setting of limits.  Therefore what concerns us here is the problem of clearly defining these discriminations, which are, so to speak, the backbone of morality.  Unlimited possibilities are not suited to man; if they existed, his life would only dissolve in the boundless.  To become strong, a man’s life needs the limitations ordained by duty and voluntarily accepted.  The individual attains significance as a free spirit only by surrounding himself with these limitations and by determining for himself what his duty is.

 

 

 

THE LINES

 

 

Six in the third place means:

He who knows no limitation 

Will have cause to lament.

No blame.

 

If an individual is bent only on pleasures and enjoyment, it is easy for him to lose his sense of the limits that are necessary.  If he gives himself over to extravagance, he will have to suffer the consequences, with accompanying regret.  He must not seek to lay the blame on others.  Only when we realize that our mistakes are of our own making will such disagreeable experiences free us of errors.

 

 

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