Agile Therapeutics AGRX under CEO Alfred Altomari

Agile Therapeutics AGRX under CEO Alfred Altomari

6

  H H H  

3

3

3

 

9

5

  H H T  

3

3

2

 

8

4

  T T T  

2

2

2

 

6

                     

3

  H T T  

3

2

2

 

7

2

  H H T  

3

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8

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8

 

HEXAGRAM 52 – Ken – Keeping Still, Mountain

Above    KEN    KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN

Below    KEN    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 JUDGMENT

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 those 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 action, 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.

1The 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 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.

 

Nine at the top means:

Noble hearted keeping still.

Good fortune.

This marks the consummation of the effort to attain tranquility.

  • 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.

 

 

MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

HEXAGRAM 62 – Hsiao Kuo – Preponderance of the Small

Above    CHEN     THE AROUSING, THUNDER

Below    KEN    KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN

While in the hexagram Ta Kuo, PREPONDERANCE OF THE GREAT (28),

the strong lines

  • preponderate and
  • are within inclosed between weak lines at the
    • top and
    • bottom,

the present hexagram

  • has weak lines preponderating,

though here again

  • they are on the outside,
  • the strong lines being within.

This indeed is the basis of

the exceptional situation indicated by the hexagram.

When

strong lines are outside,

we have the hexagram

  • I, PROVIDING NOURISHMENT (27), or
  • Chung Fu, INNER TRUTH (61);

neither represents an exceptional state.

When

  • strong elements within preponderate,
  • they necessarily enforce their will.

This creates struggle and exceptional conditions in general.

But

in the present hexagram

it is the weak element that perforce must mediate with the outside world.

If

  • a man occupies a position of authority for which
  • he is by nature really inadequate,

extraordinary prudence is necessary.

 

THE JUDGMENT

PREPONDERANCE OF THE SMALL.

Success.

Perseverance furthers.

  • Small things may be done;
  • great things should not be done.

The flying bird brings the message:

  • It is not well to strive upward,
  • It is well to remain below.

Great good fortune.

  • Exceptional modesty and
  • conscientiousness

are sure to be rewarded with success;

however,

if a man is not to throw himself away,

it is important that they should

  • not become empty form and subservience
  • but be combined always with a correct dignity in personal behavior.

We must understand the demands of the time

in order to find the necessary offset for its

  • deficiencies and
  • damages.

In any event

  • we must not count on great success,
  • since the requisite strength is lacking.

In this lies the importance of the message that

one should

  • not strive after lofty things

but

  • hold to lowly things.

The structure of the hexagram gives rise to the idea that

this message is brought by a bird.

In Ta Kuo, PREPONDERANCE OF THE GREAT (28),

  • the four strong, heavy lines within,
  • supported only by two weak lines without,

give the image of a sagging ridgepole.

Here

  • the supporting weak lines are both
    • outside and
    • preponderant;

this gives the image of a soaring bird.

But

  • a bird should not try to surpass itself and fly into the sun;
  • it should descend to the earth, where its nest is.

In this way

  • it gives the message conveyed by the hexagram.

 

THE IMAGE

Thunder on the mountain: The image of PREPONDERANCE OF THE SMALL.

Thus

  • in his conduct the superior man gives preponderance to reverence.
  • In bereavement be gives preponderance to grief.
  • In his expenditures he gives preponderance to thrift.
  • Thunder on the mountain is different from
  • thunder on the plain.

In the mountains,

  • thunder seems much nearer;

outside the mountains,

  • it is less audible than the thunder of an ordinary storm.

Thus

the superior man derives an imperative from this image:

he must always fix his eyes

  • more closely and
  • more directly

on duty

than does the ordinary man,

even though this might make his behavior seem petty to the outside world.

He is exceptionally conscientious in his actions.

In bereavement

  • emotion means more to him than ceremoniousness.

In all his personal expenditures

  • he is extremely simple and unpretentious.

In comparison with the man of the masses,

  • all this makes him stand out as exceptional.

But

the essential significance of his attitude lies in the fact that

in external matters

  • he is on the side of the lowly.

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