Hexagram 11 'Peace' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 11: Peace (I Ching)
The Image That Sets the Stage
Hexagram 11 is called Tài — Peace, or sometimes "Prospering" or "Pervading." Its picture is simple and striking: Heaven (Qian, the Creative) above, Earth (Kun, the Receptive) below. In most hexagrams built from these two trigrams, the arrangement is awkward or strained. Here, the strong and the yielding are exactly where they should be, and the channels between them are open. Rain can fall. Rivers can rise. Seed and harvest can meet in the same field.
The classical image is the king standing in the middle of the land, aligning himself with the turning of the seasons. When ruler and people, spirit and matter, inner intention and outer form are in proper relation, life flows without friction.
The Judgment in Plain Words
> Peace. The small departs; the great approaches. Good fortune. Success.
Curious if this is in YOUR chart? Calculate your free Human Design.
Calculate your chartThis is the "small leaving, great arriving" line, and it is one of the most quoted in the I Ching. In a time of true peace, what is petty, mean, and self-serving quietly loses its hold. What is generous, substantial, and rooted quietly gains ground. The text is not promising that everything will be easy — it is describing a window in which integrity has the upper hand.
How to Recognize a Tai Moment
You have probably been in one without naming it. It is the week when a stalled project suddenly finds its crew. The conversation where two people who had been circling each other for years actually meet. The stretch in a relationship where effort stops being required and presence takes over.
Practically, Tai moments share three features:
- Communication flows downward as easily as upward. What is said is heard, and what is needed is named without drama.
- Energy moves from the center outward. A single clear decision ripples through the whole field — team, family, body, market — and is received rather than resisted.
- Resources and people are in the right place at the right time. Not magically, but because previous choices have finally matured.
Reading the Lines
The six lines trace the full arc of a period of peace, including its most common failure mode.
- Nine at the start — pulling up the ribbon grass, roots and all. When you finally act, do it thoroughly. Half-measures in a Tai moment leave a ragged edge for the next season.
- Six in the second place — bearing with the uncultivated in patience, then crossing the wilderness to do real work. A peaceful field still needs tending; don't mistake calm for completion.
- Six in the third place — no going, no coming; boundaries drawn. This is the danger line. Peace tempts you to overextend. Stay inside your own perimeter. Do not, the text warns, start a new venture just because the wind is favorable.
- Six in the fourth — surrounded by flatterers, no axe at hand. When everyone agrees with you, ask who has stopped speaking. Genuine harmony is rougher than this.
- Six in the fifth — the eastern neighbor's grand ox-sacrifice cannot match the western neighbor's modest, sincere offering. The ruler's own line: sincerity of intention outweighs scale of gesture.
- Nine at the top — the wall has fallen into the moat. Stop trying to command. What looked like structure is already collapsing into the next hexagram.
The Shadow of Peace
Every Tai contains its own Standstill (Hexagram 12). Peace is not a permanent climate; it is a seasonal alignment. The shadow shows up in three familiar ways:
1. Complacency. Mistaking calm for safety, you stop scanning, stop tending, stop saying the hard thing.
2. Flattery. Because the field is open, anyone can enter it. Peace is when your discernment matters most.
3. Overreach. Because things are going well, you start more things, sign more agreements, bind yourself to more futures than this season can carry.
The Chinese character for Tai, 泰, includes the radical for "great" over the radical for "smooth." Even greatness becomes dangerous when it assumes it will always be smooth.
A Practical Note for Consulting the Hexagram
If you draw Hexagram 11, ask three questions before acting on it:
- What small thing in my life is already leaving, that I can stop chasing?
- What boundary am I being asked to honor, even though the wind says I could go further?
- Which of my gestures is sincere rather than large?
Then watch, for the next few weeks, where the channels between you and the people or systems around you begin to open or close. That movement is the hexagram speaking back to you, in real time, as only the I Ching can.


