Hexagram 35 Progress — Nine at the Top Line Explained

Nine at the Top: Progressing with horns. One uses force to subdue one's own city. Danger, yet good fortune. No blame, yet perseverance br

Yao Position Overview

Yao Text

Nine at the Top: Progressing with horns. One uses force to subdue one's own city. Danger, yet good fortune. No blame, yet perseverance brings humiliation.

Tuan Commentary

The Tuan Commentary says: Progress means 'advancing.' Brightness comes forth above the earth, yielding and cleaving to the great brightness. The yielding advances and moves upward — therefore 'the powerful prince is honored with horses in large numbers and in a single day is received in audience three times.'

Hexagram 35 Progress — Nine at the Top Line Diagram

Nine at the Top is the final line of Progress, a yang line in a yin position at the very summit of the upper trigram Li (Fire). 'Progressing with horns' means advancing aggressively, using force rather than virtue. 'Subduing one's own city' means turning this force inward — dealing with problems within one's own domain.

This is a complex line with mixed results: 'danger, yet good fortune' — the aggressive approach works, but at a cost. 'No blame, yet perseverance brings humiliation' — you can justify this action, but making it a habit brings disgrace.

As the card depicts — a warrior standing at a city gate with drawn weapons, asserting authority through force. Sometimes necessary, but the marks of battle remain.

Yilore Reading

Storm the Gate

Hexagram 35 Progress Nine at the Top Line — Front
Hexagram 35 Progress Nine at the Top Line — Back

Yilore interprets this line as the necessary warrior. The figure at the gate with drawn weapons represents the uncomfortable truth that sometimes virtue alone is not enough — sometimes progress requires force. Corruption must be confronted, disorder must be subdued, and sometimes the only language that chaos understands is strength. But the warrior who forgets to put down the sword becomes the very thing they fought against.

Divination Insights

This line's guidance: necessary force used wisely and temporarily.

Career

A forceful approach to career challenges is necessary but should be temporary. Clean house, address problems decisively, and establish order. Then return to positive, virtue-based leadership. Do not let the effectiveness of force make it your permanent management style.

Relationships

Sometimes relationships require difficult conversations or firm boundaries. Address internal relationship problems with honesty and directness, then return to warmth and gentleness. Necessary confrontation is not the same as habitual conflict.

Wealth

Forceful financial action may be needed — collecting debts, cutting losses on bad investments, restructuring failing ventures. Take decisive action, then return to positive wealth-building strategies. Do not let aggressive tactics become your normal approach to money.

Health

Sometimes health requires aggressive intervention — surgery, intensive treatment, or dramatic lifestyle changes. Take decisive action when necessary, then return to gentle, sustainable wellness practices.

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FAQ

When is 'progressing with horns' appropriate?

'Progressing with horns' — forceful advancement — is appropriate only in specific, contained situations. 'Subduing one's own city' means dealing with internal problems, cleaning house, enforcing discipline within your own domain. Sometimes a leader must act forcefully to correct corruption, remove incompetence, or establish order. This is legitimate and even necessary. But 'perseverance brings humiliation' warns: this should be a temporary measure, not a permanent leadership style.

How can something bring both 'good fortune' and 'humiliation'?

The action itself produces good results (good fortune) — the problem gets solved, order is restored, the city is subdued. But if this forceful approach becomes habitual (perseverance), it degrades into tyranny, which brings humiliation. The key is proportion: use force when absolutely necessary, then return to the Progress hexagram's fundamental principle of advancement through virtue and brightness. A surgeon uses a knife, but a surgeon who uses a knife for everything is not a healer.

What should I do with this line?

If there are problems within your domain that require firm, decisive action — take it. Don't shy away from necessary confrontation or difficult decisions. But execute with precision and then put the sword away. Clean house, then return to building through positive means. The mistake would be to fall in love with the power of force and make aggression your default approach to every problem.