Hexagram 55 'Abundance' in the I Ching. One of 64 archetypes underlying Human Design.
Hexagram 55: Abundance — The I Ching at the Zenith
Some moments arrive saturated. The work flows, the relationships land, the money appears, the body hums. Hexagram 55, Abundance (Fēng, 豐), names exactly these hours — and quietly warns what they cost.
The Shape of the Hexagram
Abundance is Thunder (Zhēn) above Fire (Lǐ). Below, the clinging flame illuminates and clarifies; above, the arousing shock of thunder rolls outward. The composition is unusual because the trigram usually associated with a mountain or a lake in lower position is here the most active, upward-striving force. Energy rises from clarity into declaration. What you see clearly, you say loudly. What you have gathered, you let sound.
The Judgment: The Sun at Noon
The Wilhelm translation renders the judgment bluntly: "Abundance. Success. Perseverance furthers. It furthers one to undertake great things. Do not grieve. Be sincere like a great man. It is not in your own power to bring about abundance; the time is favorable."
Read the last sentence slowly. You did not engineer the fullness. The conditions — a season, a confluence, a person met at the right door — favored you. This recognition is not humility theater; it is a precise description of the position. Arrogance in abundance is the swiftest way to confuse what is given with what you have built.
The Image: Thunder and Lightning
The image: Thunder and lightning come together: Abundance. The two most attention-demanding phenomena in the old Chinese sky appear at once. Decisions made under this hexagram arrive with unusual force and unusual clarity. Use them. Hesitation here is a different kind of waste than hesitation in Hexagram 4, the well; there the delay is caution, here the delay is squandering a tide.
The Gift: A Brief Permission
The gift of 55 is permission — and a narrow window. You are allowed to undertake great things precisely because the conditions are not permanent. This is the hexagram's defining feature, encoded in every line: the peak is real but the peak is passing. Wilhelm phrases it as the sun at midday. The arc is unambiguous. Whatever you do at noon, you do under a sun already tilting.
Practical guidance when this hexagram arrives:
- Pick the consequential project, not the comfortable one. Abundance funds the thing that actually matters, not the thing that merely fills time.
- Move in company. The first line specifically counsels meeting the great man. Do not attempt the peak solo.
- Be conspicuous about sincerity. Wealth, attention, or opportunity that you handle with hidden motives collapses. The hexagram insists on visible, plain dealing.
- Spend the energy on outcomes, not on performing abundance. New clothes, new status, new leverage — these are the hexagram's temptations, not its purpose.
The Shadow: Peak as Permission to Overreach
The shadow of Abundance is almost architectural. It is the assumption that the height is structural, that the sun has stopped. Three ways it darkens:
- Bloat. Hiring past the moment, building past the demand, committing past the season.
- Display. Confusing being richly placed with being worthy of being richly placed.
- Harshness toward those below. The fourth and fifth lines both warn against using fullness as a lens for contempt.
Wilhelm's sixth line is the most chilling: a house of abundance so great that one should not enter it. Step around it. Recognize that some fullness is not yours to inhabit, only to witness.
Reading the Lines
A quick orientation:
- Line 1 — Abundance begins through union; ten days is no error. Stay with the alliance that brought you here.
- Line 2 — Like the sun at midday. Confidence without excess.
- Line 3 — The underside appears. If the great man refuses, do not grieve; the zenith is already tilting.
- Line 4 — Curtains thin enough to see through. Vision remains, but the cushioning falls away.
- Line 5 — Bring the abundance, but wear simple clothes. Modesty preserves what pride would lose.
- Line 6 — Do not enter. Leave the house. The fullness has been a place, not a person.
Working with 55
The simplest practice: ask what is this abundance for? Then act on the answer before the season turns. Hexagram 55 is one of the few places in the I Ching where urgency and grace sit at the same table.


