Paya Holdings Inc PAYA under CEO Jeffrey Hack

Paya Holdings Inc PAYA under CEO Jeffrey Hack

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HEXAGRAM 03 – Chun – Difficulty at the Beginning

Above    K’AN    THE ABYSMAL, WATER

Below    CHEN    THE AROUSING, THUNDER

The name of the hexagram, Chun, really connotes

a blade of grass pushing against an obstacle

as it sprouts out of the earth hence the meaning, “difficulty at the beginning.”

The hexagram indicates the way in which heaven and earth bring forth individual beings.

It is their first meeting, which is beset with difficulties.

The lower trigram Chen is the Arousing;

  • its motion is upward and
  • its image is thunder.

The upper trigram K’an stands for the Abysmal, the dangerous.

  • Its motion is downward and
  • its image is rain.

The situation points to teeming, chaotic profusion;

thunder and rain fill the air.

But the chaos clears up.

  • While the Abysmal sinks,
  • the upward movement eventually passes beyond the danger.
  • A thunderstorm brings release from tension, and
  • all things breathe freely again.

 

THE JUDGMENT

DIFFICULTY AT THE BEGINNING works supreme success,

Furthering through perseverance.

Nothing should be undertaken.

It furthers one to appoint helpers.

Times of growth are beset with difficulties.

They resemble a first birth.

But these difficulties arise from the very profusion of all that is struggling to attain form.

Everything is in motion:

therefore if one perseveres there is a prospect of great success, in spite of the existing danger.

When it is a man’s fate to undertake such new beginnings, everything is still unformed, dark.

Hence he must hold back, because any premature move might bring disaster.

Likewise, it is very important not to remain alone;

in order to overcome the chaos he needs helpers.

This is not to say, however, that he himself should look on passively at what is happening.

He must lend his hand and participate with inspiration and guidance.

 

THE IMAGE

Clouds and thunder: The image Of DIFFICULTY AT THE BEGINNING.

Thus the superior man

Brings order out of confusion.

Clouds and thunder are represented by definite decorative lines;

this means that in the chaos of difficulty at the beginning, order is already implicit.

So too the superior man has to arrange and organize the inchoate profusion of such times of beginning, just as one sorts out silk threads from a knotted tangle and binds them into skeins.

In order to find one’s place in the infinity of being,

one must be able both

  • to separate and
  • to unite.

 

THE LINES

 

Six in the third place means:

Whoever hunts deer without the forester

Only loses his way in the forest.

The superior man

  • understands the signs of the time
  • And prefers to desist.

To go on brings humiliation.

If a man tries to hunt in a strange forest and has no guide, he loses his way.

When he finds himself in difficulties he must not try to steal out of them unthinkingly and without guidance.

Fate cannot be duped;

premature effort, without the necessary guidance, ends in failure and disgrace.

Therefore the superior man, discerning the seeds of coming events,

  • prefers to renounce a wish
  • rather than to provoke failure and humiliation by trying to force its fulfillment.

 

Six in the fourth place means:

Horse and wagon part.

Strive for union.

To go brings good fortune.

Everything acts to further.

We are in a situation in which it is our duty to act,

but we lack sufficient power.

However, an opportunity to make connections offers itself.

It must be seized.

Neither false pride nor false reserve should deter us.

Bringing oneself to take the first step,

even when it involves a certain degree of self-abnegation, is a sign of inner clarity.

To accept help in a difficult situation is not a disgrace.

If the right helper is found, all goes well.

 

 

MOVING HEXAGRAM

 

 

HEXAGRAM 49 – Ko – Revolution (Molting)

Above    TUI    THE JOYOUS, LAKE

Below    LI    THE CLINGING, FIRE

The Chinese character for this hexagram means in its original sense

an animal’s pelt, which is changed in the course of the year by molting.

From this the word is carried over to apply to

  • the “molting” in political life,
  • the great revolutions connected with changes of governments.

The two trigram making up the hexagram are

the same two that appear in K’uei, OPPOSITION (38), that is,

the two younger daughters, Li and Tui.

But while

there

  • the elder of the two daughters is above, and
    • what results is essentially only an opposition of tendencies,

here

  • the younger daughter is above.
    • The influences are in actual conflict, and
    • the forces combat each other like fire and water (lake), each trying to destroy the other.

Hence the idea of revolution.

 

THE JUDGMENT

REVOLUTION

On your own day

You are believed.

Supreme success,

Furthering through perseverance.

Remorse disappears.

Political revolutions are extremely grave matters.

They should be undertaken

  • only under stress of direst necessity,
  • when there is no way out.
  • Not everyone is called to this task,
  • but only the man who has the confidence of the people, and

    even he only when the time is ripe.

  • He must then proceed in the right way, so that
  • he
    • gladdens the people and, by enlightening them,
    • prevents excesses.

Furthermore,

he

  • must be quite free of selfish aims and
  • must really relieve the need of the people.

Only then does he have nothing to regret.

Times change, and with them their demands.

  • Thus the seasons change in the course of the year.

In the world cycle also

  • there are spring and autumn in the life of peoples and nations, and
  • these call for social transformations.

 

THE IMAGE

Fire in the lake: the image of REVOLUTION.

Thus the superior man

  • Sets the calendar in order And
  • makes the seasons clear.

Fire below and the lake above combat and destroy each other.

So too in the course of the year a combat takes place between

  • the forces of light and
  • the forces of darkness,
    • eventuating in the revolution of the seasons.

Man masters these changes in nature by

  • noting their regularity and
  • marking off the passage of time accordingly.

In this way

  • order and clarity appear in the apparently chaotic changes of the seasons, and
  • man is able to adjust himself in advance to the demands of the different times.


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