Yilore interprets the Six at the Top of Duration as 'self-destruction within stability.' That crumbling mountain — it was once so majestic, so steady. Millennia of wind and rain never shook it. But what ultimately destroyed it wasn't external force — it was the eruption of its own internal pressure.
'Restlessness in duration' contains a profound paradox — 'duration' means stability, endurance, constancy; 'restlessness' means shaking, upheaval, sudden change. When someone has 'endured' to the absolute extreme, they develop revulsion and dread toward stability itself. They begin to think 'what's the point of a life that never changes?' Then they start to thrash — but this thrashing isn't thoughtful change; it's an emotional explosion.
This phenomenon is all too common in reality: suddenly having an affair in a stable marriage — not from falling out of love, but from not being able to bear the daily sameness. Suddenly quitting a stable job — not because something better awaits, but from not being able to bear the daily repetition. Suddenly going all-in on a gamble from a stable investment strategy — not because a better opportunity appeared, but from not being able to stand the slow pace of steady returns.
'Misfortune' — such purposeless agitation is almost certain to be disastrous, because you've destroyed the stability you had without anything better to replace it. After the volcano erupts, only scorched earth remains.
Duration's complete arc from First Six to Six at the Top: Starting too fast (First Six seeking depth) → Finding rhythm (Nine in the Second, remorse disappears) → Unable to persist (Nine in the Third, inconstancy) → Wrong direction (Nine in the Fourth, no game) → Role matching (Six in the Fifth, wife vs. husband) → Self-destruction at the extreme (Six at the Top, restlessness). The top line's lesson: the way of endurance needs 'living water' — while keeping the core unchanged, introduce fresh elements and changes at the right time. Not that change is forbidden — but it must be done wisely, not by waiting for the volcano to erupt.