Great Exceeding (泽风大过)
Upper Lake (☱ Dui) · Lower Wind (☴ Xun)
Meaning (1518 summary)
An extraordinary time: the load has reached its limit — extraordinary measures are needed.
Original Chinese judgment (通行本《周易》): 「栋桡,利有攸往,亨。」
The English above is 1518's plain summary of the hexagram's theme, not a canonical translation. For a canonical public-domain English translation, see James Legge, The Yî King (1899). Line texts (yao ci) are not reproduced here.
Structure
Great Exceeding is built from two trigrams: the upper is 兑 (☱, Lake) and the lower is 巽 (☴, Wind). Reading the hexagram starts from the image of the two trigrams together, then settles onto the theme above.
How this hexagram is used
In divination, the primary hexagram (Great Exceeding) frames the present situation. If your cast produces a moving line, it marks where change is happening, and the changed hexagram shows where things are heading. Cast a hexagram to see whether you draw this one.
Cast an I Ching hexagramNote
The Chinese judgment is the source text; the hexagram structure and casting are deterministic implementations of public traditional rules. Interpretation is a traditional cultural reference, not professional advice. See all 64 in the hexagram index, and the Chinese page at 泽风大过.