AMC Networks AMCX under CEO Christina Spade

AMC Networks AMCX under CEO Christina Spade

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HEXAGRAM 59 – Huan – Dispersion (Dissolution)

Above    SUN    THE GENTLE, WIND

Below    K’AN    THE ABYSMAL, WATER

Wind blowing over water

disperses it,

dissolving it into

  • foam and
  • mist.

This suggests that when a man’s vital energy is dammed up within him

(indicated as a danger by the attribute of the lower trigram),

gentleness serves to

  • break up and
  • dissolve

the blockage.

 

THE JUDGMENT

Dispersion,

Success.

The king approaches his temple.

It furthers one to cross the great water.

Perseverance furthers.

The text of this hexagram resembles that of Ts’ui, GATHERING TOGETHER (45).

In the latter,

the subject is the bringing together of elements that have been separated,

as water collects in lakes upon the earth.

Here

the subject is the dispersing and dissolving of divisive egotism.

DISPERSION shows the way, so to speak, that leads to gathering together.

This explains the similarity of the two texts.

Religious forces are needed to overcome the egotism that divides men.

  1. The common celebration of the great
  • sacrificial feasts and
  • sacred rites,

which gave expression simultaneously to the

  • interrelation and
  • social articulation of
    • family and
    • state,

was the means employed by the great rulers to unite men.

  • The sacred music and
  • the splendor of the ceremonies

aroused a strong tide of emotion

  • that was shared by all hearts in unison, and
  • that awakened a consciousness of the common origin of all creatures.

In this way

  • disunity was overcome and
  • rigidity dissolved.

A further means to the same end is

  1. cooperation in great general undertakings that

set a high goal for the will of the people;

in the common concentration on this goal,

all barriers dissolve,

just as,

  • when a boat is crossing a great stream,
  • all hands must unite in a joint task.

But only a man

  • who is himself free of all selfish ulterior considerations, and
  • who perseveres in justice and steadfastness,

is capable of so dissolving the hardness of egotism.

 

THE IMAGE

The wind drives over the water: The image of DISPERSION.

Thus

the kings of old

  • sacrificed to the Lord And
  • built temples.

In the autumn and winter,

water begins to freeze into ice.

When

the warm breezes of spring come,

  • the rigidity is dissolved, and
  • the elements that have been dispersed in ice floes are reunited.

It is the same with the minds of the people.

Through

  • hardness and
  • selfishness

the heart grows rigid, and

this rigidity leads to separation from all others.

  • Egotism and
  • Cupidity

isolate men.

Therefore

the hearts of men

  • must be seized by a devout emotion.

They

  • must be shaken by a religious awe in face of eternity –
  • stirred with an intuition of the One Creator of all living beings, and
  • united through the strong feeling of fellowship experienced in the ritual of divine worship.

 

THE LINES

 

Six in the third place means:

He dissolves his self.

No remorse.

Under certain circumstances,

a man’s work may become so difficult

that

he can no longer think of himself.

He must

  • set aside all personal desires and
  • disperse whatever the self gathers about it to serve as a barrier against others.

Only on the basis of a great renunciation can

he obtain the strength for great achievements.

By setting his goal in a great task outside himself,

he can attain this standpoint.

 

Six in the fourth place means:

He dissolves his bond with his group. (1)

Supreme good fortune.

Dispersion leads in turn to accumulation.

This is something that ordinary men do not think of.

When

  • we are working at a task that affects the general welfare,
  • we must leave all private friendships out of account.

Only by

rising above party interests

can we achieve something decisive.

He who has the courage thus to

  • forego what is near
  • wins what is afar.

But in order to comprehend this standpoint,

one must have a wide view of the interrelationships of life,

 

 

MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

 

HEXAGRAM 44 – Kou – Coming to Meet

Above    CH’IEN    THE CREATIVE, HEAVEN

Below    SUN    THE GENTLE, WIND

This hexagram indicates a situation in which the principle of darkness,

after having been eliminated,

furtively and unexpectedly obtrudes again from within and below.

Of its own accord the female principle comes to meet the male.

  • It is an unfavorable and dangerous situation, and
  • we must understand and promptly prevent the possible consequences.

The hexagram is linked with the fifth month [June-July],

because at the summer solstice

the principle of darkness gradually becomes ascendant again.

 

THE JUDGMENT

COMING TO MEET.

The maiden is powerful.

One should not marry such a maiden.

The rise of the inferior element is pictured here in the image of

a bold girl who

  • lightly surrenders herself and
  • thus seizes power.

This would not be possible if the strong and light-giving element had not in turn come halfway.

  • The inferior thing seems so harmless and inviting that
    • a man delights in it;
  • it looks so small and weak that
    • he imagines he may dally with it and come to no harm.

The inferior man rises only because the superior man

  • does not regard him as dangerous and so
  • lends him power.

If

  • he were resisted from the first,
  • he could never gain influence.

The time of COMING TO MEET is important in still another way.

Although as a general rule the weak should not come to meet the strong,

there are times when this has great significance.

  • When heaven and earth come to meet each other, all creatures prosper;
  • when a prince and his official come to meet each other, the world is put in order.

It is necessary for elements predestined to be joined and mutually dependent

to come to meet one another halfway.

But the coming together must be free of dishonest ulterior motives,

otherwise harm will result.

 

THE IMAGE

Under heaven, wind: The image Of COMING TO MEET.

Thus does the prince act when

  • disseminating his commands And
  • proclaiming them to the four quarters of heaven.

The situation here resembles that in hexagram 20, Kuan, CONTEMPLATION (VIEW).

  • In the latter the wind blows over the earth,
  • here it blows under heaven;

in both cases it goes everywhere.

There the wind

  • is on the earth and
  • symbolizes the ruler taking note of the conditions in his kingdom;

here the wind

  • blows from above and
  • symbolizes the influence exercised by the ruler through his commands.
  • Heaven is far from the things of earth, but
    • it sets them in motion by means of the wind.
  • The ruler is far from his people, but
    • he sets them in motion by means of his commands and decrees.


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