Hexagram 13 'Fellowship' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 13: Fellowship (Tong Ren)
Some hexagrams ask you to wait. Others ask you to act. Hexagram 13, Tong Ren — Fellowship with Men — asks you to bring people together. After the cold blockages of Hexagram 12 (Standstill), Heaven finally parts. The clouds scatter. People step out of their shelters and into one another's company. This is the hexagram of community, shared purpose, and the kind of leadership that draws others in rather than pushing them away.
The Image: Fire Rising Under Heaven
The upper trigram is Heaven (Qian) — the creative, the open sky. The lower trigram is Fire (Li) — flame, clarity, the sun. Together, they picture the sun blazing openly across the heavens, shining on everything without preference, without secrecy, without favor. A meadow, a city, a battlefield — the same light falls on all.
Curious if this is in YOUR chart? Calculate your free Human Design.
Calculate your chartThis is the heart of the hexagram. Fellowship here is not the closed circle of a clan or the inner circle of a cabal. It is the fellowship of the open field. Fire under Heaven is public, equal, and visible. To befriend others in this spirit is to step into the light together.
The Judgment: Crossing the Great Water
The Wilhelm translation reads: "Fellowship with Men in the Open. Success. It furthers one to cross the great water. The perseverance of the superior man brings reward."
The image of crossing the great water is unusual in the I Ching — it appears in only a few places. It signals a journey that is genuinely worth undertaking, something that calls forth a great effort. Fellowship that is open and inclusive, the text insists, is worth that effort. It brings real success, and the leader who cultivates it will be rewarded.
The catch: this only works if the fellowship is genuine and not merely a power bloc. A small private alliance dressed up as a public good is a different hexagram entirely — and a dangerous one.
What the Trigrams Tell You
Heaven above gives the fellowship its character: clarity, principle, shared values that hold above personal liking. You are not getting together because it is comfortable, but because something larger is at stake.
Fire below gives it warmth, social energy, the human spark that makes people want to be in the room together. Without that lower fire, the meeting of minds is cold; without the upper Heaven, it is just socializing.
The wisdom is in the balance. Principled but warm. Visionary but human.
The Lines: Where Fellowship Goes Wrong
The lines of Hexagram 13 are unusually specific, and they map the ways that community can succeed or quietly fail.
- Nine in the second place — Fellowship in the clan. Solid and reliable, but limited. Loyalty to your own kind is natural, and sometimes exactly right. But if the clan becomes the whole world, the fellowship shrinks to a clique.
- Nine in the third place — Hiding the small people, climbing upward. The turning point. You begin to discriminate. You stop trying to please everyone and start choosing worthy companions. The "small people" are not despised — they are simply not the ones for this project.
- Nine in the fourth place — Holding to the great, climbing upward. The counterpart to the third. Now you actively seek out the strongest, most capable, most aligned people to build with.
- Nine in the fifth place — Fellowship in the open. The ruler's line. The king accomplishes great things and "no blame" follows. This is fellowship at its mature peak — visible, public, and effective.
The lesson threaded through the lines: open fellowship begins inclusive and stays open, but it is not naive. A real community chooses.
Practical Guidance
When Hexagram 13 appears, ask three questions:
1. What am I trying to build with others? Name the shared purpose. Without it, you have company, not fellowship.
2. Am I keeping the circle open, or quietly closing it? A project that works only with the "right" people in the "right" room has stopped being Tong Ren.
3. Who are the people I am actively choosing to walk with? Fellowship is not just who shows up. It is also who you invite, promote, and stand beside.
Tong Ren is the rarest kind of community: a circle with a center but no walls. It is hard to build and easy to lose. The I Ching does not promise you will get it. It only says that if you do, it is worth crossing the great water to keep it.


