Outcome of JetBlue Airways JBLU Buyout of Spirit Airlines SAVE
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HEXAGRAM 56 – Lu – The Wanderer
Above LI THE CLINGING, FIRE
Below KEN KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN
- The mountain, Ken, stands still;
above it
- fire, Li, flames up and does not tarry.
Therefore
the two trigrams do not stay together.
Strange lands and separation are the wanderer’s lot.
THE JUDGMENT
THE WANDERER.
Success through smallness.
Perseverance brings good fortune
To the wanderer.
When
-
a man is a wanderer and stranger,
- he should not be gruff nor overbearing.
- he should not be gruff nor overbearing.
- He has no large circle of acquaintances
therefore
- he should not give himself airs.
- He must be cautious and reserved;
in this way
- he protects himself from evil.
If
-
he is obliging toward others,
- he wins success.
- he wins success.
A wanderer has no fixed abode;
his home is the road.
Therefore
he must take care to remain upright and steadfast,
so that
he
- sojourns only in the proper places,
- associating only with good people.
Then
he
- has good fortune and
- can go his way unmolested.
THE IMAGE
Fire on the mountain: The image of THE WANDERER.
Thus
the superior man
- Is clear-minded and cautious In imposing penalties, And
- protracts no lawsuits.
When grass on a mountain takes fire, there is bright light.
However,
the fire
- does not linger in one place, but
- travels on to new fuel.
It is a phenomenon of short duration.
This is what penalties and lawsuits should be like.
They
- should be a quickly passing matter, and
- must not be dragged out indefinitely.
- Prisons ought to be places where people are lodged only temporarily,
as guests are.
- They must not become dwelling places.
THE LINES
Six in the fifth place means:
He shoots a pheasant.
It drops with the first arrow.
In the end this brings both praise and office.
Traveling statesmen were in the habit of
introducing themselves to local princes with the gift of a pheasant.
Here
the wanderer wants to enter the service of a prince.
To this end
he shoots a pheasant, killing it at the first shot.
Thus
- he finds friends who praise and recommend him,
and in the end
- the prince accepts him and confers an office upon him.
Circumstances often cause a man to seek a home in foreign parts.
If
he knows
- how to meet the situation and
- how to introduce himself in the right way,
he may find
- a circle of friends and
- a sphere of activity
even in a strange country.
Nine at the top means:
The bird’s nest burns up.
The wanderer laughs at first,
Then must needs lament and weep.
Through carelessness he loses his cow.
Misfortune.
The picture of a bird whose nest burns up indicates
loss of one’s resting place.
This misfortune may overtake the bird
if it is heedless and imprudent when building its nest.
It is the same with a wanderer.
If
he
- lets himself go, laughing and jesting, and
- forgets that he is a wanderer,
he will later have cause to weep and lament.
For
if through carelessness a man loses his cow – i.e., his modesty and adaptability – evil will result.
MOVING HEXAGRAM
HEXAGRAM 31 – Hsien – Influence (Wooing)
Above TUI THE JOYOUS, LAKE
Below KEN KEEPING STILL, MOUNTAIN
The name of the hexagram means
- “universal,”
- “general,”
and in a figurative sense
- “to influence,”
- “to stimulate.”
- The upper trigrams is Tui, the Joyous;
- the lower is Ken, Keeping Still.
By its persistent, quiet influence, the lower, rigid trigram
- stimulates the upper, weak trigram, which
- responds to this stimulation cheerfully and joyously.
- Ken, the lower trigram, is the youngest son;
- the upper, Tui, is the youngest daughter.
Thus the universal mutual attraction between the sexes is represented.
In courtship, the masculine principle must
- seize the initiative
and
- place itself below the feminine principle.
Just as
-
the first part of book I begins with the hexagrams of
- heaven
and
- earth,
- heaven
the foundations of all that exists,
-
the second part begins with the hexagrams of
- courtship
and
- marriage,
- courtship
the foundations of all social relationships.
THE JUDGMENT
Influence.
Success.
Perseverance furthers.
To take a maiden to wife brings good fortune.
- The weak element is above,
- the strong below;
hence
- their powers attract each other,
so that
- they unite.
This brings about success, for
all success depends on the effect of mutual attraction.
By keeping still within while experiencing joy without,
one can
- prevent the joy from going to excess
and
- hold it within proper bounds.
This is the meaning of the added admonition, “Perseverance furthers,” for
it is perseverance that makes the difference between
- seduction
and
- courtship;
in the latter
the strong man
- takes a position inferior to that of the weak girl
and
- shows consideration for her.
This attraction between affinities is a general law of nature.
Heaven and earth
- attract each other
and thus
- all creatures come into being.
Through such attraction
- the sage influences men’s hearts,
and thus
- the world attains peace.
From the attractions they exert
we can learn the nature of all beings
- in heaven
and
- on earth.
THE IMAGE
A lake on the mountain: The image of influence.
Thus
the superior man encourages people to approach him
By his readiness to receive them.
A mountain with a lake on its summit is stimulated by the moisture from the lake.
It has this advantage because its summit
- does not jut out as a peak
but
- is sunken.
The image counsels that the mind should be kept
- humble
and
- free,
so that
it may remain receptive to good advice.
People soon give up counseling a man who thinks
that
he knows everything better than anyone else.