
From classical logic: why “good fortune” feels late—a structured read
People often label delays as “luck.” In classical logic, auspice is alignment between trend and strategy. Feeling “late” usually means wrong phase read, wrong lever, or seat mismatch. Here is how we unpack it with the sixty-four-hexagram base: 1. Hidden Dragon phase with Flying Dragon moves Book of Changes, Qian, bottom line: Hidden Dragon: do not act rashly—timing not ripe; build first. Case: six months into a startup, “orders won’t come,” draws Hidden Dragon. The phase is early buildup—polish the offer and accumulate proof—not blowing the budget on ads (forcing Flying Dragon). Misallocated spend explains stagnation, not a curse. Commentary anchor: Cheng Yi’s Yichuan Yizhuan—the yang force lies low and must not yet be deployed; premature action magnifies cost. 2. Body–use imbalance—strategy fights the trend Body–use models self (body) vs environment (use):
Read More
When you ask “Does he love me?”—how a direct AI strips emotion and reads the hexagram
On emotional topics, many people start from emotion first: they want the hexagram to confirm what they hope is true, not what the pattern actually suggests. Our AI advisor is built to strip emotion and return to hexagram logic. Below is a real dialogue, unpacked. User question: “Does he love me? Should I stay in this relationship?” Step one: The AI anchors the reading—the user received Hexagram 17, Following (泽雷随), with the moving line at nine in the fifth place.
Read More