Hexagram 18 'Work on What Has Been Spoiled' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 18: Work on What Has Been Spoiled (I Ching)
Hexagram 18, known as Gǔ (蠣) and translated as Work on What Has Been Spoiled, is one of the most practical and grounded hexagrams in the I Ching. It does not offer escape or transcendence. It offers a hammer, a broom, and a clear task. When this hexagram appears, the message is simple: something in your life, your family, your work, or your inner world is in disrepair, and the time for repair has come.
The Structure: Mountain Over Wind
Hexagram 18 is composed of Gen (Mountain) below and Xun (Wind/Wood) above. Wind blows across the mountain, but the mountain is the still, enduring foundation. This image suggests that corruption or decay has settled at the base of something, and the gentle but persistent force of wind must work on it from above.
Wood, the element of the upper trigram, is associated with beginnings, growth, and movement. The mountain is the static, the ancestral, the inherited. Together, they describe a situation where the energy to repair is present, but the rot lies deep in the structure of what has been built, accumulated, or handed down.
The Judgment: Three Time Frames
The Judgment of Hexagram 18 is famously divided into three stages: the work of the past, the work of the present, and the work of the future. This trinity is the heart of the hexagram.
- Work on what was spoiled by your father. This refers to the inherited material, emotional, or spiritual state passed down from the father or the paternal line — debts, traditions, unfinished business, unresolved patterns.
- Work on what was spoiled by your mother. This is the inner realm: health, habits, household, the emotional atmosphere of the home, the nurturing foundation.
- Work on what was spoiled by your parents. This is the deeper ancestral and cultural inheritance, the collective patterns of the family line.
The hexagram insists that repair is not optional. The child who refuses to deal with a corrupt inheritance will, in turn, leave a worse inheritance to their own children. There is a moral gravity here that is not punishing but clarifying. If the past is spoiled, leaving it untouched poisons the future.
The Image: Repair as a Virtue
The Image of Hexagram 18 is the wood of the mountain, referring to how ancient people worked on wood to keep it from rotting, or how they cleared the brush on a slope. In both cases, the principle is the same: prevention through diligent, regular maintenance. The hexagram does not promise inspiration or sudden transformation. It promises that consistent, unglamorous labor applied to what is decaying will yield real and lasting structure.
The gift of Hexagram 18 is the capacity for consequential action — the willingness to face a problem rather than narrate it, to repair rather than abandon. The shadow is the opposite: avoidance, denial, or sentimental attachment to something that should be cleared away.
Practical Guidance
When Hexagram 18 appears, consider these questions:
1. What am I inheriting that I have not yet honestly examined? This might be a family business, an emotional pattern, a health habit, a relationship dynamic, or a financial situation left by previous choices.
2. Where am I avoiding repair because the work feels beneath me, or because I fear what I will find?
3. Who can I call on for help? Hexagram 18 specifically advises seeking capable assistance. One person is rarely enough to repair what was spoiled by generations of neglect.
4. Am I acting now, or am I waiting for the right moment? The hexagram is explicit: great action now, ordinary action later, small action still later. Delay carries a cost.
In daily life, this can look like finally clearing out a long-neglected storage room, sitting down with a family member to resolve a longstanding misunderstanding, restructuring a failing project, or beginning the slow work of healing a chronic physical issue. None of these actions is dramatic. All of them are essential.
The Deeper Teaching
Hexagram 18 teaches that decay is not failure — it is a stage. Buildings crumble, relationships accumulate friction, bodies age, and systems drift. The hexagram does not mourn this. It calls the decayed thing by its name and asks what is to be done.
The greatest strength here is not brilliance but endurance. Not vision, but follow-through. The sage of this hexagram is not a strategist or a mystic; they are the person who shows up on a Tuesday with the right tools and the willingness to begin.
If Hexagram 18 has come to you, take it as a direct instruction. The spoiled thing in your life is calling. The window for clean repair is open. The work is not glamorous, but it is the work that your future self, and the future of whatever you are stewarding, will thank you for.


