26 The Great (Nurturing) - The I Ching


In this hexagram we have the image of Heaven below the mountain, the representation of the Great Nurturing. This is a hexagram of necessary restraint, the power here is immense and must be properly directed. Buried treasure is a perfect material depiction of this dynamic, something valuable and great that must be hidden under the earth to keep and grow its value.
The Qabala fits here perfectly. Binah is the restraining Mother and it is in her womb that the wisdom of Chokmah (Hexagram 9, The Small Nurturing), the Father, takes shape, and goes on to form the rest of the Tree.
Judgement: It is in the outside world that we must apply this wisdom.
1 As the hexagram deals with restraint, this is our first warning: when danger is ahead, it’s good to stop.
2 Here we have gone too far, moved too quickly and too roughly, and broken our vehicle. Many of you may remember a situation like this, a chain slipping off a bike when we pedal too fast, a car breaking down, or, most importantly, our bodies giving out when we push ourselves too far.
3 With the right resources and help we can go farther and keep ourselves safe. This is taking turns on a long road trip so you don’t fall asleep at the wheel.
4 A bull is a very dangerous animal, but the danger is restrained by keeping it in a pen. Consider the whole human work of domestication as a progressive reduction of danger through imposing restraint on nature.
5 James Legge says it well in his commentary: “A boar is a powerful and dangerous animal. Let him be castrated, and though his tusks remain, he cares little to use them.”
This is true of most animals, a gelding is a much easier animal to work with for it is sexual instinct that drives us all mad.
6 Heaven’s highway prospers through restraint of our more base instincts. Consider the immense restraint we all practice when driving on a literal highway. Though we are in, and surrounded by, extremely dangerous and fast moving machines, we are quite good at avoiding death and danger through maintaining awareness and a defensive outlook.
Let’s see what Confucius says of this hexagram:
The Hedgehog here is like the one of Archilochus:
A fox knows many things, but a hedgehog knows one big thing.
It is then, “The Big Idea”, while the Elephant is the active application. The big idea being firmness and structure, along with the wisdom of Emperor Tching (Tang), as Ezra Pound described:
(Note: as the hexagram corresponds to Binah, it relates to the 3s in Tarot, specifically the Three of Wands and Disks, in my article on the Three of Wands I directly referenced both this hexagram and poem.)
The Elephant's application is essentially to unbury the treasure, to use the wisdom of the ancients to forge the path ahead.
Not only does the hexagram deal with the restraining and repressing of animal instinct, but also with the uncovering of what has been buried by time. The archetypal motif of the Sleeping King embodies the hexagram best. A powerful and wise man literally buried in the womb of the Earth to maintain himself until the hour of greatest need.
Let us then engage in daily self renewal, so we continue to grow and prosper, and ultimately, let us know when to stop.