Hexagram 24 'Return' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 24: Return (Fu) — The Quiet Turn
Hexagram 24 is one of the most beloved images in the I Ching. After the splintering decay of Hexagram 23 (Splitting Apart), where yang has all but vanished, a single bright line reappears at the base of the figure. That lone yang stroke is fu — the return. The hexagram is Thunder (Zhen) below, Earth (Kun) above: thunder stirring within the soil, a seed cracking open before any green is visible.
In traditional commentary, Hexagram 24 is paired with the winter solstice. The days have reached their lowest point. Light has not yet returned in any visible way, but the mechanism has already flipped. Yang is on the move. Everything that follows — the lengthening days, the spring, the harvest — is already contained in that one line at the bottom.
This is the hexagram's core teaching: the return begins before there is any evidence of it.
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Calculate your chartThe Shape of Turning
What makes Hexagram 24 psychologically interesting is that nothing on the surface has changed. Five of the six lines are still yin. Anyone scanning the situation from the outside would see the same darkness, the same fatigue, the same unresolved pattern. The difference is directional. The force line has shifted from contracting to expanding, and once that shift happens, time itself begins to work for you rather than against you.
In practical terms, this often shows up as a small, almost trivial impulse — a thought you hadn't considered in months, an old friend calling, a sudden urge to reopen a project you'd quietly abandoned. The hexagram says: notice that impulse. It is not nothing. It is the first yang line, and it is moving.
A Gift and a Shadow
The gift of Hexagram 24 is timing. You don't have to push, perform, or convince. You only have to recognize the turn when it comes and move with it. People who live well inside this hexagram have a feel for the pivot point of a cycle. They rest when rest is required and they act the moment the ground becomes workable again. They trust that what was lost is not gone, only out of season.
The shadow is misreading the moment. Either you miss the return entirely — staying contracted, grieving, or strategizing defensively long after the tide has begun to come back in — or you try to force a return that hasn't yet begun. The hexagram is explicit: the return must come from below. You cannot invent it from the top down.
How the Lines Move
The line structure tells the story of a return in progress:
- Nine in the first place — Return while you are still far from the center of things. No blame. This is the easiest moment: the turn is so fresh there is nothing to undo, no reputation to recover, no entrenched position to defend.
- Six in the second place — Return through stillness. The image is of a calm, grounded arrival. Great good fortune. This is the line of someone who lets the return happen inwardly before trying to express it outwardly.
- Six in the third place — Repeated return. There is a flailing quality here; the person keeps drifting out and coming back. No danger, because the underlying direction is correct, but it is not yet settled.
- Six in the fourth place — Walking in the company of others on the return. No blame. The return is shared; you are not alone in the turn, and that mutual recognition stabilizes it.
- Six in the fifth place — Noble-hearted return. No blame. This is the wise leader who has seen decline, accepted the lesson, and returns without bitterness, without needing to blame anyone for the gap.
- Six at the top — Missing the return. Misfortune. This is the only really dark line. The opportunity has passed without being seized, and what could have been renewal becomes rigidity.
Working With the Hexagram
When Hexagram 24 shows up in a reading, the practical question is almost always: where is the single yang line in your life right now, and are you willing to follow it?
A useful exercise is to set aside, even briefly, the question of whether the new impulse is "realistic" or "well-timed" by external standards. The hexagram is not asking you to engineer a comeback. It is asking you to recognize that something has already begun to move, and that your job is to cooperate with it. Walk toward it the way a plant walks toward light — without drama, without justification, without waiting for permission.
The turning has already happened. The question is whether you will be one of the people who notices.


