Hexagram 44 · Heaven above Wind · The First Encounter
Wind blows beneath heaven. It reaches everywhere, touching everything. At the bottom of the hexagram, a single yin line has appeared — the first dark force entering after the pure light of the previous hexagram. This is the moment of first contact, the initial encounter, the unexpected meeting. The Chinese character 姤 (gòu) combines "woman" with "meeting" — an illicit or unexpected encounter.
The Judgment states: "Coming to Meet. The maiden is powerful. One should not marry such a maiden." This is stark language. The hexagram warns that what appears at first meeting may be seductive but ultimately destabilizing. A single yin line at the bottom will, if unchecked, grow to dominate the entire hexagram. The initial encounter carries within it the seed of total transformation.
The Image says: "The prince issues commands and promulgates them to the four quarters of heaven." This is the response to unexpected encounter: do not ignore it, do not suppress it — direct it. The wise ruler acknowledges what has appeared and gives it proper channels. The force that arrives unexpectedly must be recognized, understood, and managed before it grows beyond control.
The deeper teaching: every major transformation begins with a small encounter. A chance meeting. An unexpected attraction. A tempting offer. A new idea that seems harmless. The hexagram's wisdom lies in recognizing that the first moment of contact determines everything that follows. If you respond unconsciously, the encounter will grow and dominate you. If you respond with awareness, you can work with the energy without being overwhelmed by it.
In matters of the heart, Coming to Meet appears when an unexpected attraction or encounter enters your field. Perhaps you meet someone who is magnetic but unavailable. Perhaps you feel a pull toward someone who is not right for you. Perhaps an old flame reappears. The hexagram's warning is clear: the first moment of this encounter is powerful, but it carries danger. Do not act impulsively.
The "powerful maiden" is not evil — she is simply strong. The attraction is real. The chemistry is genuine. But the hexagram advises against "marrying" this energy — against committing to it, formalizing it, making it permanent. Some encounters are meant to be acknowledged, felt, and released. Not every attraction needs to become a relationship. Not every spark needs to become a fire.
This hexagram also appears when you are already in a relationship and an unexpected attraction arises. The teaching is not to suppress the attraction — suppression only gives it more power. Instead, acknowledge it, understand what it represents, and choose not to act on it. The encounter is a message from your unconscious, not a command. You can learn from it without obeying it.
A harder truth: sometimes the "powerful maiden" is a pattern. You keep meeting the same type of person — charismatic but unreliable, exciting but unstable, magnetic but unavailable. The encounter keeps repeating because you have not learned its lesson. The hexagram asks: what is this pattern trying to teach you? What unmet need is drawing you toward these encounters again and again?
In professional life, Coming to Meet appears when an unexpected opportunity or offer arrives. Perhaps a recruiter contacts you with an irresistible offer. Perhaps a new business idea seems too good to be true. Perhaps a potential partner approaches you with a proposal that sounds perfect. The hexagram's warning: look beneath the surface. What appears powerful and attractive may carry hidden risks.
This does not mean rejecting every unexpected opportunity. It means examining the first encounter carefully before committing. The person who immediately accepts every offer that comes their way is acting unconsciously. The person who pauses, investigates, asks questions, and evaluates before responding is practicing this hexagram's wisdom. The encounter itself is not the problem; the problem is responding without awareness.
Financially, this hexagram warns against impulsive decisions triggered by unexpected events. A sudden market opportunity. A hot tip from a friend. An investment that seems to be moving fast. The hexagram advises: slow down. The energy of coming to meet is seductive — it makes you want to act immediately. But the first moment of contact is when you are most vulnerable to poor judgment. Wait. Examine. Then decide.
A practical framework: when an unexpected opportunity arrives, ask three questions. Is this aligned with my long-term strategy? Have I had time to evaluate the risks? Am I responding from excitement or from clarity? If the answer to any of these is no, do not commit. The opportunity will either still be there later or something better will arrive.
On the spiritual path, Coming to Meet appears when unexpected experiences arise during practice. Perhaps you have a sudden vision. Perhaps you feel an unusual energy. Perhaps you encounter a teacher or teaching that seems revelatory. The hexagram's warning applies here too: not everything that arises in practice is what it seems. The first encounter with spiritual power requires discernment.
The Buddhist tradition calls these encounters makyo — illusions that arise during meditation. They are vivid, compelling, sometimes beautiful. But they are not enlightenment. The practitioner who clings to these experiences is seduced by the "powerful maiden." The practitioner who acknowledges them and returns to practice is following the hexagram's wisdom.
This hexagram also appears when you encounter a new teaching or practice that seems to offer quick enlightenment. The hexagram warns: if it seems too easy, it probably is. Spiritual growth requires sustained effort, not sudden encounters. The teacher who promises immediate awakening may be offering seduction rather than truth. Examine carefully before committing.
A deeper teaching: the yin line at the bottom represents the first stirring of unconscious content. In Jungian terms, this is the shadow beginning to emerge. The encounter with your shadow is powerful and potentially transformative. But if you identify with it — if you "marry" it without discernment — you will be overwhelmed. The task is to acknowledge the shadow, integrate its energy consciously, and not let it dominate your personality.
The commentary tradition connects this hexagram to the story of King Zhou of Shang and Daji, his infamous consort. Daji was said to be a fox spirit who took human form to seduce the king. Her influence was subtle at first — a word here, a suggestion there. But over time, her power grew until the king was completely dominated, leading to the fall of the Shang dynasty. This is the "powerful maiden" taken to its extreme — the encounter that was not managed and grew to destroy an empire.
The Duke of Zhou, who wrote the Judgment texts, used this story as a warning to future rulers. The danger was not the woman herself — it was the ruler's unconscious response to her. If King Zhou had recognized Daji's influence early and set boundaries, the dynasty might have survived. Instead, he was seduced, and the encounter grew until it consumed everything.
Confucius reflected: "The superior person, when they encounter something unexpected, does not act immediately. They pause. They examine. They understand the nature of what has appeared. Only then do they respond. This is how the first encounter is managed — not by suppression, but by awareness."
In 2008, a young trader at Société Générale named Jérôme Kerviel began making unauthorized trades. At first, the positions were small. They were profitable. The bank's systems flagged some irregularities, but the responses were slow and incomplete. The encounter with Kerviel's fraud was not managed decisively at the first moment.
Over the next months, Kerviel's positions grew exponentially. By the time the bank fully understood the scope, he had accumulated €49 billion in unauthorized futures contracts — the largest single fraud in banking history. The bank lost €4.9 billion. What began as a small, manageable encounter had grown into a catastrophe because it was not addressed at the first moment of contact.
The lesson: the first encounter with a problem is when it is most manageable. The warning signs were there — irregular trades, system alerts, unusual patterns. But each was addressed partially, incompletely, without full awareness. The hexagram's teaching is clear: when something unexpected appears, deal with it completely at the first moment. Do not let it grow through partial responses.
The deeper teaching: Kerviel himself was a "coming to meet" — a young, ambitious trader who entered the bank's culture and found ways to exploit its weaknesses. The bank's response to this encounter was the problem. They did not issue clear commands. They did not promulgate standards to all quarters. They allowed the encounter to grow unchecked until it became unmanageable.
— Zen teaching on managing encounters
— Commentary on the Image of Hexagram 44
— Taoist story on transient encounters
1. What unexpected encounter has recently entered your life? Are you responding with awareness or with impulse?
2. Where in your life are you attracted to something that may be seductive but ultimately destabilizing? What would happen if you paused before committing?
3. Think of a time when an initial encounter grew into something much larger than expected. What did that teach you about the power of first moments?
4. If you viewed your current challenges as encounters requiring conscious response rather than impulsive reaction, how would your approach change?
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