Hexagram 25 (無妄, Wú Wàng) is one of the 64 classical I Ching hexagrams. Wilhelm’s English translation renders the hexagram’s name as “Innocence (The Unexpected)”. This page describes how classical commentary reads this hexagram when received in answer to a career question.
“Innocence. Supreme success. Perseverance furthers. If someone is not as they should be, they have misfortune, and it does not further one to undertake anything.”
— classical judgment text
“Under heaven thunder rolls: all things attain the natural state of innocence. Thus the kings of old, rich in virtue, and in harmony with the time, fostered and nourished all beings.”
— classical image text
The hexagram’s general theme
Acting from a place of inner alignment with what is, not what one wants. Innocence is not naivete — it is freedom from the projection of will.
Classical keywords: innocence, no projection, doing without grasping, natural action, right intention.
無妄 Wú Wàng read for career questions
Classical I Ching commentary reads career questions through the hexagram's overall register of action, timing, and the relationship between effort and reward. The hexagram describes the field of forces around the career question; classical doctrine reads whether the moment favours bold action, patient consolidation, strategic withdrawal, or reconsideration of direction.
For career-domain questions specifically, the hexagram’s register touches: doing the work without obsessing over outcome. These are among the modern interpretive resonances classical commentary recognises in the hexagram.
Classical guidance for the hexagram: Act because it is right, not because of what you'll get. Don't push remedies on what isn't actually broken. Innocence at the wrong moment is also wrong.
Read against a career question, this guidance describes the field of forces around the hexagram's overall register of action, timing, and the relationship between effort and reward. the hexagram describes the field of forces around the career question; classical doctrine reads whether the moment favours bold action, patient consolidation, strategic withdrawal, or reconsideration of direction.. The action the guidance suggests — or warns against — applies to the career question being asked, with the chart-specific qualifications that consultation provides.
Configuration
- Hexagram: #25 無妄 (Wú Wàng), “Innocence (The Unexpected)”
- Question type: Career (事業)
- Question domain: Professional advancement, job decisions, business ventures, vocational direction
- Upper trigram: qian · Lower trigram: zhen
- Hexagram lines (top to bottom):
111001(1 = yang / solid, 0 = yin / broken)
Why a generic hexagram-for-career interpretation falls short
This page describes what classical commentary reads when Hexagram 25 is received for a career question — the hexagram’s general register applied to the career domain. But a complete I Ching reading for a specific question requires the casting method (yarrow vs three-coin), identification of changing lines, the resulting secondary hexagram, and integration with the querent’s specific BaZi chart. Without those, the reading is reference-level — the broad register, not the chart-specific application. For chart-aware reading on a specific career question, book a BaZi consultation — the four-pillar chart layered with the I Ching reading produces deeper diagnostic resolution than the I Ching reading alone.