Hexagram 32 Duration — Nine in the Fourth Line Explained

Nine in the Fourth: No game in the field. Persisting in the wrong direction — no matter how long — yields nothing.

Yao Position Overview

Yao Text

Nine in the Fourth: No game in the field.

Tuan Commentary

The Tuan Commentary says: Duration means 'lasting.' The firm above and the yielding below; thunder and wind work together; the yielding and the active both respond — this is Duration. Duration brings success, no blame, and perseverance furthers because it endures in its proper way.

Hexagram 32 Duration — Nine in the Fourth Line Diagram

The Nine in the Fourth is the fourth line of Duration, a yang line in a yin position (out of place), at the bottom of the upper trigram Zhen (Thunder). 'No game in the field' — going to hunt but catching no game. Only three characters, yet each one pierces the heart.

Nine in the Fourth is out of place (yang in yin) — you have the hunter's strength and passion, but you're standing on empty ground with no game. It's not that your aim is poor or that you haven't waited long enough — this place simply has nothing to catch. You've applied your greatest constancy in the worst possible position — naturally, you come home empty-handed.

As the card depicts — grass bends in the wind as a man stands alone on an empty plain with his hunting gear, nothing around him, nothing to show. You are persisting in the wrong direction or position, and despite long effort, you consistently come up empty. That lonely, futile feeling is reminding you: when the direction is wrong, no amount of persistence will yield results.

Yilore Reading

No Game in the Field

Hexagram 32 Duration Nine in the Fourth Line — Front
Hexagram 32 Duration Nine in the Fourth Line — Back

Yilore interprets the Nine in the Fourth of Duration as 'misplaced persistence.' This hunter is no lazy man — he woke up early, carried his gear, and waited all day in the wilderness. He has perseverance, patience, and skill — but all of it is useless on an empty plain with no game.

'No game in the field' are the three cruelest words in Duration — because they negate not your effort, but its direction. Insufficient effort can be remedied with harder work, inadequate skill can be improved with practice — but a wrong direction means all effort and practice multiplied by zero is still zero.

This is Duration's profound counter-example: constancy is certainly important — but its prerequisite is correct direction. Nine in the Third's problem is 'inconstancy' (right direction, no persistence), Nine in the Fourth's problem is 'misguided constancy' (wrong direction, persistence anyway). Both fail to reach the goal, but Nine in the Fourth pays a higher price because it wastes more time and energy.

If you've been persisting in one direction for a long time with consistently zero results — perhaps the issue isn't that you haven't persisted enough, but that you need to change hunting grounds.

Having the courage to admit 'this road doesn't lead anywhere' isn't giving up — it's making room to find the road that does. The wisest hunter isn't the one who waits longest — but the one who knows where to wait.

Divination Insights

The core theme is 'examine your direction, have courage to change course.' You may have been doggedly persisting in one direction without returns. Stop comforting yourself with 'just a little longer' — perhaps what you need is not more persistence, but a brave course correction.

Career

Nine in the Fourth raises a painful but necessary career question: does what you've been doing truly have a future? Perhaps you're grinding it out in a declining industry, or silently toiling in a role where you're not needed, or pursuing a position that doesn't suit you at all. 'No game in the field' — if you've been waiting in this 'hunting ground' for a long time with nothing to show, it's time to consider moving. Changing fields isn't failure — continuing to waste time on the wrong track is.

Relationships

In love, Nine in the Fourth may be the truth you least want to face — the person you've been pursuing or waiting for may simply not be 'your game.' It's not that you're not good enough or not devoted enough — this 'hunting ground' simply has no one meant for you. If you've been giving one-sidedly for a long time without reciprocation, perhaps it's time to redirect your energy and sincerity toward someone who can truly respond. Waiting in vain isn't loyalty — it's cruelty to yourself.

Wealth

Nine in the Fourth points directly to investment direction problems. Have you been stubbornly holding on in an unprofitable area? Maybe a stock that chronically underperforms, a project that keeps burning cash, or an investment approach with extremely low returns. 'No game in the field' — there's nothing here. Don't dress up your stubbornness as 'long-term value investing' — true value investing means investing where there's value, not waiting for miracles on barren ground.

Health

Nine in the Fourth may suggest your fitness approach doesn't suit you. Maybe you've been doing cardio religiously but your weight hasn't budged (perhaps you need strength training instead), or your 'healthy' diet actually makes you feel worse (perhaps your constitution doesn't suit that dietary style). Like a hunter changing grounds — if your current health plan shows no results after a long time, try a different approach.

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FAQ

What does 'no game in the field' mean in the Nine in the Fourth?

'No game in the field' means going hunting but catching nothing. 'Field' is a hunting expedition, 'game' refers broadly to prey. Only three characters — brutally concise. It offers no explanation for why there's no game, no consolation — just the cold statement of a result: you caught nothing. Nine in the Fourth is a yang line in a yin position (out of place) — meaning you're standing in the wrong spot. Your ability is fine (yang represents strength), but you're applying it in the wrong place. It's like an excellent chef trying to do accounting — no matter how hard he tries, he can't produce a good spreadsheet.

Which is worse — Nine in the Fourth's 'wrong direction' or Nine in the Third's 'inconstancy'?

Nine in the Third 'not giving duration to character' means having the right direction but not persisting — like a driver who knows the destination but keeps making U-turns. Nine in the Fourth 'no game in the field' means persisting stubbornly in the wrong direction — like a driver going full speed on the wrong highway. Both fail to reach the destination, but in terms of time cost, Nine in the Fourth may be worse — because Nine in the Third might stumble onto the right path through constant trying, while Nine in the Fourth goes further astray the longer it persists. However, the good news is: regardless of which you are, recognizing the problem is the beginning of change.

What should I do if I receive the Nine in the Fourth changing line?

The core advice is 'stop, look up, change hunting grounds.' First, honestly evaluate — how long have you been persisting in this direction? What results have you achieved? If long investment yields near-zero returns, that's the signal. Second, distinguish 'not yet time' from 'wrong direction' — the former shows clear progress even without reaching the end; the latter means no progress no matter what. Third, have the courage to redirect — admitting 'this road is a dead end' takes more courage than persisting. Fourth, take your experience with you — the skills you gained in the wrong hunting ground won't go to waste; your hunting skills, patience, and observation will all serve you in the new territory.