Hexagram 32 'Duration' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 32: Duration (Heng) — The Art of What Endures
Duration is one of the quieter virtues. We celebrate breakthroughs, launches, and the moment the arrow flies. We rarely celebrate the patient hand that draws the bow day after day. Hexagram 32, Heng (恆), names that hand. The I Ching does not offer it as inspiration; it offers it as a working principle. What lasts is not what is loudest, but what is correctly oriented over time.
The Image: Thunder in the Wood
Hexagram 32 stacks Wind/Wood (Xun) below Thunder (Zhen). Wood nourishes the earth, and thunder rolls above the canopy. The two trigrams share the quality of motion — wind and thunder are the two moving signs of nature — yet they are layered rather than face-to-face as in Hexagram 31 (Influence). This is the first practical lesson: duration is not the same as intensity. Influence seeks a response. Duration has already decided its direction and simply continues.
The Image text is striking in its brevity: "Thunder and wind: the image of Duration. The superior person stands firm and does not change direction." Note that it does not say "does not change." It says "does not change direction" — implying refinement of method, but consistency of aim.
The Judgment: Perseverance That Is Actually Correct
The judgment reads: "Duration. Success. No blame. Perseverance furthers. It furthers one to have somewhere to go." This last clause is the test. The Wilhelm/Baynes translation adds a buried warning — duration without destination is merely stubbornness. The oracle is blessing the kind of perseverance that has a why behind it.
In practice, when you draw 32, the I Ching is asking: are you persisting in something that is genuinely correct, or are you persisting because stopping would mean admitting a misjudgment? The hexagram rewards the first and quietly mocks the second.
The Six Lines: A Map of How Duration Fails or Holds
The lines trace a recognizable arc, almost biographical.
- Line 1 — Seeking duration too hastily. Trying to lock things in before they have a foundation. The image of rushing to nail down what hasn't yet grown.
- Line 2 — Remorse disappears. The first sign of correct endurance. One stops forcing and starts fitting.
- Line 3 — No fixed ground to character. A caution against over-defining oneself. Clinging to a fixed identity brings humiliation; flexibility within a stable core is the way through danger.
- Line 4 — No game in the field. A striking image — persistence that has exhausted the available conditions. Sometimes the answer is to pause, not to push.
- Line 5 — Giving duration to one's character. The most subtle line. A woman here brings good fortune; a man faces danger. Yin in a yang place: softness endures, hardness breaks. Gentleness, not aggression, carries long projects.
- Line 6 — Restless duration at the top. The final warning. Even a good quality, overextended, becomes agitation. End, before you overstay.
The Gift of Duration
The gift of 32 is reliable presence. People and projects that carry this hexagram as a signature have a quality of gradual authority — not charisma, not speed, but the thing you trust because it has been quietly there. Think of a well-tended workshop, a long marriage, a daily practice. Duration is the hexagram of the second decade of a venture, when the initial excitement has burned off and only the genuine thing remains.
The Shadow of Duration
The shadow is calcification. Duration can become ritual without meaning — going to the gym, showing up to the meeting, staying in the role — long after the original impulse has died. The hexagram is brutally specific about this: the ninth in the third place warns that a person with no flexible ground in their character will be humiliated. Rigid endurance breaks; what endures is what can bend without losing its axis.
Working With Duration
When 32 shows up, a few practical moves help:
1. Name the direction before you name the effort. Persistence only compounds when aimed.
2. Audit the form, not the feeling. Is the structure of what you're doing still correct, even if the feeling has faded?
3. Soften, don't stiffen. The fifth line is the key — adapt method, hold aim.
4. Notice the season. Some "lack of progress" is a Line 4 moment — there is simply no game in the field right now. Wait without gripping.
Hexagram 32 is not a fortune of fireworks. It is the fortune of the steady hand on the tiller, the patient tree putting down roots, the relationship that has survived the long middle. It asks for almost nothing from the moment, and almost everything from the years.


