Hexagram 33 Retreat — Nine in the Third Line Explained

Nine in the Third: An entangled retreat is distressing and dangerous. Retaining servants and concubines brings good fortune. The third line warns of retreating

Yao Position Overview

Yao Text

Nine in the Third: An entangled retreat is distressing and dangerous. Retaining servants and concubines brings good fortune.

Tuan Commentary

The Tuan Commentary says: Retreat means 'withdrawal.' The firm is in the correct position and responds with the yielding. The yielding gradually advances and grows. In Retreat, success comes through the movement of the time. 'In small matters perseverance furthers' — when growth occurs it is through gradual advancement. The meaning of the time of Retreat is truly great!

Hexagram 33 Retreat — Nine in the Third Line Diagram

Nine in the Third is the third line of Retreat, a yang line in a yang position (properly placed), at the top of the lower trigram Gen. 'Entangled retreat' means being caught up in attachments while trying to withdraw — burdened by subordinates, dependents, or personal ties that slow you down.

'Distressing and dangerous' — this state is physically and emotionally exhausting, and the danger is real. But 'retaining servants brings good fortune' offers a nuanced lesson: while you can't execute a clean strategic retreat under these circumstances, you can still manage small-scale affairs successfully.

As the card depicts — a figure trying to move forward while others cling to their robes. The weight of responsibilities makes swift retreat impossible, yet there's also a tenderness in the scene — these aren't enemies holding you back, but people who depend on you.

Yilore Reading

Letting Go with Grace

Hexagram 33 Retreat Nine in the Third Line — Front
Hexagram 33 Retreat Nine in the Third Line — Back

Yilore interprets the Nine in the Third as 'the art of letting go with grace.' The figure weighed down by clinging dependents faces a real dilemma: retreat demands speed and lightness, but loyalty and compassion demand staying for those who need you.

The wisdom of Nine in the Third is not 'abandon everything and run' — that would be cowardice, not strategy. Nor is it 'stay and fight to the death' — that would be stubbornness, not loyalty. The answer lies in the middle: be decisive where decisiveness is needed (strategic direction, major commitments) and gentle where gentleness is appropriate (caring for dependents, handling routine affairs).

In practical terms: the manager who must leave a failing department doesn't just vanish — they ensure their team is cared for, transition responsibilities, and depart with dignity. The person leaving a relationship doesn't ghost — they have honest conversations, honor shared obligations, and withdraw with grace.

Divination Insights

The core theme is 'burdened retreat — decisive in big things, compassionate in small things.' Your withdrawal is complicated by genuine responsibilities. Handle major strategic decisions with firmness, but attend to those who depend on you with kindness.

Career

Your retreat from the current work situation is complicated by people who depend on you. Handle your strategic decisions firmly and your team responsibilities with compassion. You can manage daily operations effectively even as you prepare for a larger transition.

Relationships

Emotional attachments are complicating your ability to make clear-headed decisions about the relationship. Be firm about your boundaries and direction, but gentle with the feelings involved. Small acts of care are appropriate even during major transitions.

Wealth

Financial entanglements are slowing your ability to reposition. Handle day-to-day finances responsibly while developing a longer-term exit strategy for positions that are not serving you well.

Health

Health management is complicated by competing demands on your time and energy. Be disciplined about the essentials (sleep, basic nutrition, medication) even if you cannot maintain an ideal health routine right now.

易羅 アプリのアイコン

Get the Yilore app

Full charts, daily hexagrams, and deeper AI readings on your phone.

App Store

FAQ

What is an 'entangled retreat'?

An 'entangled retreat' means trying to withdraw while still tangled up with subordinates, dependents, or personal attachments. Nine in the Third is yang (strong, active) but sits at the boundary between the lower and upper trigrams — pulled in both directions. You know you should retreat, but you're dragged down by responsibilities or emotional ties that slow your withdrawal. It's like trying to run while carrying too much luggage — you can't move fast enough to escape danger, yet you can't bring yourself to drop what you're carrying.

Why is 'retaining servants' auspicious here?

'Retaining servants and concubines brings good fortune' means that while the entangled state is dangerous for major strategic decisions, it's actually fine for handling small domestic or routine matters. The lesson is about proportionality: you can't execute a grand retreat while burdened, but you can manage day-to-day affairs competently. In modern terms: you may not be able to make a clean career change right now, but you can handle your current responsibilities well. You may not be able to fully exit a complex situation, but you can attend to the people depending on you.

What should I do with this line?

Be decisive about what matters most and compassionate about the rest. The core problem is trying to do everything at once — retreating strategically while managing every small detail. Prioritize: identify what's truly important (your safety, your core assets, your key relationships) and handle those decisively. For everything else — household affairs, minor responsibilities, routine tasks — handle them with kindness but don't let them paralyze your larger strategy. In career terms: handle your current projects competently but start quietly preparing your exit. In relationships: take care of those who depend on you while making space for necessary change.