Hexagram #37, 家人 Jiā Rén — The Family (The Clan) — pairs the upper trigram of Wind (巽) over the lower trigram of Fire (離). Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
Decision quality
Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
What this hexagram means
The upper trigram is Wind (巽), ☴ — gentle, penetrating. The lower trigram is Fire (離), ☲ — clinging, light, bright. The interplay of these two forces, with the upper sitting above the lower, is what gives this hexagram its character.
The classical Chinese name 家人 (Jiā Rén) carries the connotations that the King Wen sequence assigned to position #37 in the order of change: Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
This hexagram is also rendered in English as Dwelling People, Household, Kinsfolk — different translators emphasise different facets of its meaning.
What follows on this page is the full classical reading: the Judgment attributed to King Wen, the Image attributed to the Duke of Zhou, all six line texts, and the three derived hexagrams (互卦, 錯卦, 綜卦) that classical practitioners always read alongside the primary one. The page closes with a contemporary application section — how the configuration tends to land in modern decisions.
The Judgment (彖辭)
家人:利女貞。
The Family. The perseverance of the woman furthers.
The Judgment (彖辭) is the line attributed to King Wen, written while he was imprisoned by the last Shang ruler. It states the configuration’s essential character and indicates the favorable or unfavorable trajectory of the situation. For 家人, it sets the time-quality of the moment: Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
The decision quality the judgment recommends here is direct: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
The Image (大象傳)
風自火出,家人。君子以言有物而行有恆。
Wind comes forth from fire: the image of the Family. Thus the noble person has substance in their words and duration in their way of life.
The Image (大象傳, “Greater Image”) is the second classical layer, attributed to the Duke of Zhou. It takes the natural picture suggested by the two trigrams — wind (巽, ☴) above fire (離, ☲) — and uses it to describe how the noble person (君子) responds. Image readings are a guide to right conduct: not what will happen, but what one ought to do.
For hexagram #37, the image points to a specific style of inner posture appropriate to this configuration. The classical formulation should be read as a behavioral instruction, not as a metaphor.
The six lines (爻辭)
Each hexagram has six lines (爻), counted from the bottom up. When you cast the I Ching using the traditional yarrow-stalk or three-coin method, certain lines emerge as “changing lines” — these are the ones whose line text (爻辭) speaks directly to your question. Below are all six line texts for hexagram 37 in classical Chinese with English rendering. If your reading produced a changing line, the relevant text is the one whose position matches.
Line position carries its own structural meaning: lines 2 and 5 are the “central” positions of their respective trigrams (and line 5 is the ruler’s position). Yang lines in odd positions and yin lines in even positions are “correct”; mismatches indicate friction.
First line · Bottom (Initial)
初九:閑有家,悔亡。
Initial Nine: Firm seclusion within the family. Remorse disappears.
Firm seclusion within the family. Remorse disappears. Establish the inner circle's boundaries early and definitely.
Second line · Second
六二:无攸遂,在中饋,貞吉。
Six in the Second: She should not follow her whims. She must attend within to the food. Perseverance brings good fortune.
She should not follow her whims; she attends within to the food. Perseverance brings good fortune. Steady internal labor over external preference.
Third line · Third
九三:家人嗃嗃,悔厲,吉;婦子嘻嘻,終吝。
Nine in the Third: When tempers flare up in the family, too great severity brings remorse. Good fortune nonetheless. When woman and child dally and laugh, it leads in the end to humiliation.
Tempers flare; severity brings remorse — yet good fortune. Indulgent laughter leads to humiliation. Severity is preferable to laxity in family discipline.
Fourth line · Fourth
六四:富家,大吉。
Six in the Fourth: She is the treasure of the house. Great good fortune.
She is the treasure of the house. Great good fortune. The competent anchor of the household generates abundance.
Fifth line · Fifth (Ruler)
九五:王假有家,勿恤,吉。
Nine in the Fifth: As a king they approach their family. Fear not. Good fortune.
As a king he approaches his family. Fear not. Good fortune. Lead the family with kingly dignity, not tyrannical or familiar.
Sixth line · Top
上九:有孚威如,終吉。
Top Nine: His work commands respect. In the end, good fortune comes.
His work commands respect. In the end, good fortune. Earned authority through visible labor.
互卦 (Nuclear Hexagram) — the inner pattern
Whichever hexagram you cast, classical practice does not stop at the surface. The next thing you read is the 互卦 (hù guà) — the nuclear or mutual hexagram. Below is what it is for 家人 Jiā Rén, and how to read its meaning.
Before Completion — nothing yet in its right place.
The 互卦 (Nuclear hexagram, sometimes also called the “mutual” or “inner” hexagram) is constructed from the inner four lines (lines 2, 3, 4, and 5) of the primary hexagram. Lines 2-3-4 form the new lower trigram; lines 3-4-5 form the new upper trigram. What it shows is the inner pattern of the situation — the structural undercurrent beneath the surface configuration.
The nuclear hexagram of 家人 Jiā Rén is hexagram #64, 未濟 Wèi Jì — Before Completion. Before Completion — nothing yet in its right place. The 64th and last hexagram does not close the cycle; it reopens it. The fox almost crosses, then wets its tail.
What this means in practice: the surface configuration of The Family (The Clan) is being driven, underneath, by the energetics of Before Completion. When you act on this hexagram, the inner texture of your situation is shaped by the nuclear — so it is the nuclear, not just the primary, that you must respect.
錯卦 (Inverse Hexagram) — the polar opposite
The second derived reading is the 錯卦 (cuò guà) — the inverse or polar opposite. Every yang line becomes yin and every yin line becomes yang. The result is the configuration that lies on the other side of every choice in the primary.
The storm has broken — tension releases as thunder and rain.
The 錯卦 (Inverse, sometimes called “Opposite” or “Crossed”) is constructed by flipping every line of the primary hexagram — every yang becomes yin, every yin becomes yang. It is the hexagram’s polar opposite: the situation that would result if every active force became receptive and every receptive force became active.
The inverse of 家人 Jiā Rén is hexagram #40, 解 Xiè — Deliverance. The storm has broken — tension releases as thunder and rain. The blockage is over; deliver decisively, then forgive the past.
Reading the inverse is how classical practitioners check their interpretation against its mirror. The wisdom of The Family (The Clan) is sharpened by knowing what its absolute negation looks like — Deliverance is the warning, the contrast, or sometimes the secret complement of the primary configuration.
綜卦 (Reverse Hexagram) — the other side of the situation
The third derived reading is the 綜卦 (zōng guà) — the reverse or inverted hexagram. The whole figure is turned upside down. This is how the situation reads from the perspective of the other party, or how the same event would be described looking back from its conclusion.
Two opposing tendencies — fire flames upward, lake settles downward.
The 綜卦 (Reverse, sometimes called “Inverted” or “Turned”) is constructed by turning the entire hexagram upside down — line 1 becomes line 6, line 2 becomes line 5, and so on. It is the situation seen from the other side — what the same event looks like to your counterpart, or what the same hexagram becomes when read from the top down rather than the bottom up.
The reverse of 家人 Jiā Rén is hexagram #38, 睽 Kuí — Opposition. Two opposing tendencies — fire flames upward, lake settles downward. Yet in opposition lies the seed of fertile difference.
In the King Wen sequence, 家人 and 睽 sit as a paired set — one is the situation, the other is the situation viewed from the opposite end. When you read your own hexagram, your counterpart in the situation is reading the reverse. Knowing the 綜卦 is how you read both halves of the same event.
Modern application
In contemporary practice, hexagram 37 家人 Jiā Rén tends to surface in readings around questions of:
building a healthy team culture
household management
small-team operating norms
values-based relationships
The decision-quality recommendation, distilled from the Judgment, the Image, and the line texts together, is: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
If you cast this hexagram and want to integrate its reading with your personal chart, the next step is to layer it onto your BaZi (Four Pillars) or Zi Wei Dou Shu profile — the same hexagram lands differently on a Yang Wood day master in a hot summer than it does on a Yin Water day master in winter. The I Ching tells you the shape of the moment; your BaZi tells you the terrain the shape will land on.
Hexagram 37 for career questions
For questions about career — promotions, role changes, business decisions, leaving or staying — hexagram 37 家人 Jiā Rén (The Family (The Clan)) describes the time-quality your professional situation is sitting in. Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
The trigram configuration of Wind above Fire (gentle, penetrating over clinging, light, bright) is the lens. Read the upper trigram (Wind) as how your work appears to others — the visible shape of the role, the project, the public face. Read the lower trigram (Fire) as the inner ground you are bringing to it — your competence, motivation, and disposition.
The decision-quality recommendation, distilled from the Judgment, applies directly to career deliberations: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
If your reading produced a changing line, the most career-relevant positions are line 5 (the ruler’s seat — how authority is moving above you) and line 2 (the worker’s central position — how your own role is moving). For hexagram 37, line 5 reads: 九五:王假有家,勿恤,吉。 — Nine in the Fifth: As a king they approach their family. Fear not. Good fortune.
Hexagram 37 for love & relationship questions
For questions about relationships — love, family, friendship, partnerships, conflict — hexagram 37 家人 Jiā Rén (The Family (The Clan)) describes the energetic shape between the parties involved, regardless of which side asked the question. Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
Read the configuration as a meeting of two forces: Wind above Fire (gentle, penetrating over clinging, light, bright). The upper trigram (Wind) describes how the situation looks from the outside between you, while the lower trigram (Fire) describes the inner ground each person is bringing to the meeting. Misalignment between the two is often what the cast is pointing at.
The decision-quality recommendation, applied to the relational frame: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
If your reading produced changing lines, lines 2 and 5 are the most relationally significant — they are the central positions of the lower and upper trigrams respectively, and classical practice reads them as the “hearts” of each side of the relationship. The reverse hexagram (綜卦) is also worth reading for relationship questions: it shows the same situation from the other person’s perspective.
Hexagram 37 for decisions & choices
For questions about making a decision — whether to act, when to act, which option to choose, whether to wait — hexagram 37 家人 Jiā Rén (The Family (The Clan)) is among the most direct of the I Ching’s answers. The Judgment of every hexagram is, structurally, a recommendation about decision quality.
The decision recommendation for this configuration: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
If your reading produced a changing line, treat the line text as a more specific instruction within that overall recommendation. The line texts (爻辭) of hexagram 37 are the I Ching’s answer to the more granular form of your question; read the relevant line above (in the “The six lines” section) for the specific configuration of action your situation calls for. Line 5 (the ruler’s position) is the most authoritative line for decision questions when a clear path forward is needed.
For complex decisions, also read the inverse (錯卦) of this hexagram — it shows you the polar-opposite course of action, which is the test the I Ching uses for whether a recommendation is robust to its own negation.
Hexagram 37 for health & vitality questions
For questions about health and vitality, hexagram 37 家人 Jiā Rén (The Family (The Clan)) describes the energetic quality your body and mental state are operating in. Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct.
In classical Chinese-medicine correspondences, the upper trigram (Wind) governs the thigh (TCM organ: gallbladder), and the lower trigram (Fire) governs the eye (TCM organ: heart). For health questions, this hexagram’s configuration draws attention to those two channels in particular.
In Five-Element terms, the upper trigram is Wood and the lower is Fire; the relation between these two elements (generative, controlling, or weakening) is part of how the hexagram lands on your specific BaZi chart.
The decision-quality recommendation, applied to health: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect. The I Ching does not diagnose, but it does indicate the time-quality of recovery, depletion, or balance — which is exactly what classical practitioners read it for in medical contexts. Layer this reading onto your BaZi (Four Pillars) chart to see how the hexagram’s elemental configuration interacts with your day master’s elemental balance — the same hexagram lands very differently on a hot-summer Yang Wood than it does on a winter-frozen Yin Water.
Frequently asked questions
What does I Ching hexagram 37 (家人 Jiā Rén) mean?
Right ordering of the inner unit — family, team, household — by clear roles, substantive words, and durable conduct. The Wilhelm/Baynes English rendering is “The Family (The Clan).” It is composed of the upper trigram Wind (巽) over the lower trigram Fire (離). The decision quality of the configuration: Order within first. Words must have substance; conduct must endure. Severity beats indulgence — but with respect.
What is the 互卦 (nuclear hexagram) of 家人?
The nuclear hexagram (互卦, hù guà) of 家人 is hexagram #64, 未濟 Wèi Jì — Before Completion. It is constructed by taking lines 2, 3, 4 of the primary as the new lower trigram, and lines 3, 4, 5 as the new upper trigram. It reveals the inner pattern hidden inside the situation.
What is the 錯卦 (inverse hexagram) of 家人?
The inverse hexagram (錯卦, cuò guà) of 家人 is hexagram #40, 解 Xiè — Deliverance. It is constructed by flipping every line: every yang becomes yin and every yin becomes yang. It shows the polar opposite of the primary configuration.
What is the 綜卦 (reverse hexagram) of 家人?
The reverse hexagram (綜卦, zōng guà) of 家人 is hexagram #38, 睽 Kuí — Opposition. It is constructed by turning the entire hexagram upside down — reading from line 6 down to line 1. It shows the situation viewed from the other side, often the perspective of your counterpart in the same event.
How is hexagram 37 cast or chosen?
The classical methods are the yarrow-stalk method (described in the Great Treatise of the I Ching) and the simpler three-coin method. Both produce six lines — some “old” (changing) and some “young” (stable). The hexagram you cast is read first; if there are changing lines, their line texts (爻辭) speak directly to your question, and the hexagram resulting from the changes is read as the future trajectory.
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King Wen pair (37–38): Hexagram 37 家人(this page) is paired with 睽#38 Opposition. In the King Wen sequence, the two hexagrams in this pair are the same line pattern read in opposite directions — 綜卦 (reverse) of one another. Many classical commentators read them together as “the same situation viewed from the two sides.”