Hexagram 38 'Opposition' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 38: Opposition (I Ching)
Hexagram 38, called Kuí (睽) — usually rendered as Opposition, Contradiction, or Diversity — describes what happens when two fundamentally different forces meet and refuse to blend. It is not a hexagram of conflict in the aggressive sense. It is a hexagram of tension that has its own kind of fruit.
The Image: Fire Above, Lake Below
The upper trigram is Fire (Lí, 離), bright and rising. The lower trigram is Lake (Duì, 澤), joyful and descending. The two move in opposite directions: flames reach upward, water flows down. Yet they share a single picture — the setting sun blazing on the water, the brightest hour of the day, when the world looks as if it were made of fire and water at once.
The Image commentary captures this with a single instruction: the superior person separates each from its kind. This is not a call to divide or judge. It is a call to perceive. Different things are different. Confusing them creates disorder; honoring the distinction creates clarity.
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Calculate your chartThe Core Teaching
The judgment is famously understated: "Opposition. In small matters, good fortune."
Why only small matters? Because when two opposites meet, they cannot unify on the great questions — they are not built to. Fire cannot dry the lake; water cannot extinguish the sun. But they can agree on a thousand small things: where to place the boat, the color of the light, the hour to call it a day.
This is the practical genius of Hexagram 38. It tells you the goal is not to resolve the opposition. The goal is to find the workable surface where two differences can touch without burning or drowning each other. Pushing for unity on large matters is the mark of an immature understanding. The mature one learns to collaborate in the small.
Reading the Movement
The six lines trace a journey through opposition. The first line counsels patience: do not chase the one who is different from you. Like a lost horse, they will return of their own accord if the field is safe. The second confirms — meeting in a small way brings good fortune. Keep it small.
The third line warns of being dragged into a quarrel you did not ask for: there is danger, but if you stumble and rise, you are not to blame. The fourth offers relief — when you feel isolated in your opposition, a great person will appear to help. Trust them, and there is no blame. The fifth speaks of regret dissolving when the companion finally "bites through the covering" — a long-awaited moment of honesty that clears the air.
The top line is the most striking. The opposition is seen first as a pig wall


