Hexagram 46 'Pushing Upward' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 46: Pushing Upward
The Image at the Center
Above, Wind/Wood. Below, Earth. The hexagram picture is a young tree still buried in soil, its pale shoots curling upward through the dark, mineral weight of the ground. This is not a tree standing in a meadow — that would be Hexagram 53, Development, where wood already crowns a mountain. Hexagram 46 is the moment before emergence, when the energy is entirely directed upward but the breakthrough has not yet happened. Pushing Upward, then, is not about reaching the top. It is about the slow, irrevocable force that brings roots to light.
The name in Chinese is Shēng (升), "ascending" or "rising." The judgment is unusually confident: "Pushing Upward has great success. It furthers one to see the great man. Do not worry." The presence of the word "worry" is a tell — even the I Ching is reminding you that this hexagram, for all its promise, will tempt the soul into impatience.
The Gift of Steady Ascent
The gift of Hexagram 46 is that what grows from within cannot be stopped. Wood softens stone not by force but by persistence. Roots split rock; seedlings crack pavement. The hexagram trusts that the right kind of effort — patient, organic, repetitive — eventually inverts any obstacle. This is not the lightning of Hexagram 51, Shock, nor the charisma of Hexagram 1, the Creative. Pushing Upward is the quiet laurel of someone who simply keeps showing up.
In practical terms, the gift shows up when:
- You are in a long apprenticeship and the master has not yet noticed you.
- You are building a body of work, a practice, a reputation, and nothing visible has happened yet.
- You are tending a relationship, a project, or a child in its pre-emergent stage.
The I Ching specifically counsels meeting with a wise elder or mentor in this phase ("see the great man"). The trunk of a young tree is strengthened by growing beside a stronger one. Isolation is not the same as independence.
The Shadow: Forcing the Shoots
Where the gift is patience, the shadow is premature blooming. The hexagram warns twice — in the second line about sincerity over performance, and in the sixth line about "pushing upward in darkness," where you must "not cease in your perseverance." The shadow side looks


