Box Inc BOX under CEO Aaron Levie

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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,
- top and
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;
- outside and
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.
THE LINES
Six at the beginning means:
The bird meets with misfortune through flying.
- A bird ought to remain in the nest until
- it is fledged.
If
- it tries to fly before this,
- it invites misfortune.
Extraordinary measures should be resorted to only
when all else fails.
At first
- we ought to put up with traditional ways as long as possible;
otherwise
-
we
- exhaust ourselves and our energy and
- still achieve nothing.
- exhaust ourselves and our energy and
Six at the top means:
He passes him by, not meeting him.
The flying bird leaves him.
Misfortune.
This means bad luck and injury.
If
- one overshoots the goal,
- one cannot hit it.
If
- a bird will not come to its nest but flies higher and higher,
- it eventually falls into the hunter’s net.
He who in times of extraordinary salience of small things
- does not know how to call a halt,
but
- restlessly seeks to press on and on,
draws upon himself misfortune at the hands of gods and men,
because
he
- deviates from the order of nature.
MOVING HEXAGRAM
HEXAGRAM 30 – Li – THE CLINGING, FIRE
Above LI THE CLINGING, FIRE
Below LI THE CLINGING, FIRE
This hexagram is another double sign.
The trigram Li means
- ¨to cling to something,”
- “to be conditioned,
- to depend or rest on something,” and also
- “brightness”.
A dark line clings to two light lines,
- one above and
- one below –
the image of an empty space between two strong lines,
whereby the two strong lines are made bright.
The trigram represents the middle daughter.
The Creative has incorporated the central line of the Receptive, and thus
Li develops.
As an image, it is fire.
Fire
- has no definite form but
- clings to the burning object and thus
is bright.
As water pours down from heaven,
so fire flames up from the earth.
- While K’an means the soul shut within the body,
- Li stands for nature in its radiance.
THE JUDGMENT
THE CLINGING.
Perseverance furthers.
It brings success.
Care of the cow brings good fortune.
What is dark clings
- to what is light and so
- enhances the brightness of the latter.
A luminous thing giving out light
must have within itself something that perseveres; otherwise
it will in time burn itself out.
Everything that
gives light
is dependent on something to which it clings,
in order that it may continue to shine.
Thus
- sun and moon cling to heaven, and
- grain, grass, and trees cling to the earth.
So too
the twofold clarity of the dedicated man
- clings to what is right and thereby
- can shape the world.
Human life on earth is conditioned and unfree, and,
when man
- recognizes this limitation and
- makes himself dependent upon the harmonious and beneficent forces of the cosmos,
he achieves success.
The cow is the symbol of extreme docility.
By cultivating in himself an attitude of
- compliance and
- voluntary dependence,
man
- acquires clarity without sharpness and
- finds his place in the world. 1
THE IMAGE
That which is bright rises twice: The image of FIRE.
Thus the great man, by perpetuating this brightness,
Illumines the four quarters of the world.
Each of the two trigrams represents the sun in the course of a day.
The two together represent the repeated movement of the sun,
the function of light with respect to time.
The great man continues the work of nature in the human world.
Through the clarity of his nature
he causes the light
- to spread farther and farther and
- to penetrate the nature of man ever more deeply.