Hexagram 14 'Great Possession' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 14: Great Possession (I Ching)
The Sun at the Zenith
Hexagram 14, Da You 大有 — Great Possession — is the picture of the sun at high noon, blazing directly overhead. Above is Li, the clinging, fire and clarity. Below is Qian, the creative, heaven and pure yang force. Together they form a moment of total illumination: nothing is hidden, everything is lit, and the world appears in full possession of its light. This is the peak hexagram of abundance in the I Ching, the moment when the vessel is so full that it can carry more only by giving away.
Reading the Judgment
The Wilhelm-Baynes translation offers one of the simplest judgments in the book: "Possession in great measure. Supreme success." But the Chinese text is more subtle. 大有 literally means "great having" or "the great one has" — and the implied subject is you, the querent, in this moment of casting. Success is not promised as a future event; it is described as the quality of the hour you are standing in. You already have it. The question becomes what you will do with what you hold.
The secondary advice embedded in the image is striking: "The noble man curbs evil and fosters good." The Chinese phrase 遏恶扬善 — suppress what is harmful, raise up what is good — is not a moralism. It is a practical statement about energy management. When you possess much, what you exclude and what you amplify matters as much as what you accumulate. Abundance that does not discriminate turns to rot.
The Hawk on the Wall
The most famous line in the hexagram is the fifth: "The prince shoots at the hawk on the high wall and takes it." This is not a hunting image. It is a meditation on aim. The hawk sits at the highest point, visible to everyone, the one creature that is hardest to deny. Shooting it down does not mean destroying an enemy; it means removing the one thing that is preventing clear sight at the top of your own wall. Whatever has climbed highest in your life — pride, ambition, a relationship, a self-image — that is the hawk. Hexagram 14 says: your aim is true. Use it.
Practical Guidance for the Drawing
When 14 shows up, the work is not acquisition. The work is clarity and curation. Practically, this looks like:
- Inventory honestly. What do you actually have, in money, time, relationships, skill, attention? Most people under-count. The hexagram asks you to see the full measure of the cup.
- Make the cut at the top. The hawk line is so central because the biggest thing you are tolerating is rarely the worst — it is the most elevated. Removing it often unblocks everything below.
- Decide what to amplify. With great resources comes the obligation of choice. Spend, invest, speak, build — but choose. Do not diffuse.
- Expect the peak. Noon is a turning point. Hexagram 14 is the last hexagram of the first month of spring in the Zhou calendar's symbolism; it is high summer in the soul. Enjoy it; do not pretend it is permanent.
The Gift and the Shadow
The gift of 大有 is the luminous, unobstructed sight that only comes at the top of a climb. You can see what is real, what is fake, what is yours, and what is not yours. Decisions made from this height are unusually clean.
The shadow is subtle and worth naming. The sun at noon casts no shadow at all — which means the person standing in 14 has no cover. They are seen as fully as they see. Possession attracts attention. What you have becomes a target, a measure others judge you by, and a weight you cannot put down. Greatness, here, is not comfortable. It is the exposure of a sovereign, not the warmth of a fire.
If 14 appears in a reading about a venture, expect triumph followed by a demand: now what? If it appears in a reading about inner life, expect the realization that you have been underestimating yourself — and a quiet, steady instruction to stop. The hexagram is, in the end, a clearing. Stand in the light. Use it deliberately. And shoot the hawk.


