I. Overview of Dùn Hexagram and Natural Symbolism (Qian above, Gen below)
Hexagram Name: Dùn (遁) — Retreat, concealment, defending as a form of offense
Hexagram Statement: “Retreat: success; small benefit in being steadfast.”
Inner Trigram ☶ Gen — Mountain: Symbolizes self-restraint, stability, stillness, patience, introspection, and firmness.
Natural Phenomenon Symbolism:
Heaven above, Mountain below: A high and powerful sky presses upon a stable mountain, symbolizing the need to remain firm and cautious when facing strong external forces.
Mountain meeting Heaven: One must act with prudence, practicing restraint and strategic withdrawal to protect oneself.
Core Principle:
When facing external pressure or potential danger, adopt “retreat as advance”: be cautious yet strategic, waiting for the right moment to act.
II. Personality Traits and Behavioral Style
1. Personality Traits
Reserved and steady: Like a mountain, emotions are controlled, maintaining inner stability.
Cautious and patient: Withdraw instead of confronting strong forces directly.
Principled: Inner firmness like a mountain; core values remain uncompromised.
Strategically wise: Judicious in timing; conceals strength and avoids direct conflict.
Observant: Uses periods of retreat to monitor the environment and prepare for future decisions.
2. Behavioral Style
Cautious in challenges: Stabilize oneself before advancing in complex situations.
Low-profile and steady: Act conservatively, defend first, advance later.
Retreat without fear: Withdrawal is a strategy, not cowardice; accumulate strength for future opportunity.
Step-by-step progression: Observe, analyze, and act gradually.
III. Family, Workplace, and Social Outcomes
1. Positive Effects
Family: Steady and reserved; resolves conflicts and maintains harmony.
Workplace: Suited for strategic, risk management, administrative, or policy roles; avoids conflict and preserves resources.
Social Life: Behaves prudently, earns respect, gains support.
Advice:
Apply Dùn wisdom: retreat strategically, uphold principles, wait for the right moment, and act decisively to achieve career success and family harmony.
2. Negative Effects
Excessive retreat: May miss opportunities, appear passive or timid.
Slow action: Prolonged retreat may limit initiative.
Overly low-profile: Talents and resources may remain underutilized.
Advice:
Overcome hesitation and excessive restraint. Act decisively at the right moment to protect personal interests and seize opportunities.
IV. Interaction of Inner and Outer Trigrams and Development Stages
Inner Trigram (Gen – Mountain) — Self-Preparation Stage
Focuses on inner steadiness, patience, observation, and restraint.
Goal: Accumulate strength, maintain principles, learn strategy and patience.
Outer Trigram (Qian – Heaven) — Environment and Execution Stage
Represents external pressures, opportunities, and challenges.
Goal: Judge timing, choose strategy, and decide when to act.
Retreat to defend: Preserve oneself under strong forces, accumulating strength for future action.
Stage-wise strategy: First restrain, then act at the right moment to turn danger into safety.
V. Six Lines Analysis and Behavioral Guidance
First Line: Initial retreat; be cautious and avoid rash moves.
Second Line: Stabilize and accumulate strength; observe the environment and prepare for subsequent action.
Third Line: Warning against premature exposure of strength or over-advancement.
Fourth Line: Retreat or restrain at critical moments to prevent conflict or loss.
Fifth Line: Act at the appropriate time; choose optimal strategy and timing.
Top Line: Steady retreat ensures preservation, accumulation of resources, and long-term benefits.
Practical Wisdom:
Retreat is not cowardice, but strategy; observe the environment and accumulate strength during withdrawal to prepare for decisive action in critical moments.
VI. Essence of I Ching Wisdom
Advance through retreat: Know when to withdraw and conceal strength as a long-term strategy.
Balance inside and outside: Inner stability like a mountain, outer environment strong like Heaven; retreat preserves oneself.
Observe and accumulate: Retreat is not passive; use this time to gather strength and insights.
Low-profile and principled: Avoid showing force, but remain ready to act appropriately when necessary.