Hexagram 3: Zhun -

Difficulty at the Beginning
Fine Art
Unknown Artist — The Five Points

Unknown Artist — The Five Points

Unknown Artist (ca. 1827)

This watercolor depicts the Five Points, a notorious New York slum district in the 1820s. The chaotic street scene shows the difficult conditions and social disorder that characterize the early stages of breakthrough.

Practical Integration

An unknown artist painted The Five Points around 1827, documenting a notorious New York intersection where Anthony, Orange, Cross, and Little Water Streets converged. The watercolor shows a chaotic street scene: ramshackle buildings lean against each other, laundry hangs across alleys, pigs root in muddy streets, crowds gather in doorways. This was the heart of a slum district where freed slaves, Irish immigrants, and working poor lived in dense confusion. The painting captures urban life in the moment of its messy emergence—not planned neighborhoods but shanties thrown up wherever space permitted, not orderly commerce but street vendors and grog shops and penny theaters jumbled together. This is Zhūn (屯), which combines Water (☵) below and Thunder (☳) above. The character 屯 originally depicted a sprout struggling through hard ground, the difficulty inherent in any beginning. Thunder over Water: energy attempting movement but meeting resistance. The Five Points emerged this way—opportunity and desperation colliding, creating something new but turbulent. Zhou Dynasty diviners saw this hexagram when ventures first took form, when the meeting of opposing forces produced breakthrough but not yet clarity. This watercolor depicts the Five Points, a notorious New York slum district in the 1820s. The chaotic street scene shows the difficult conditions and social disorder that characterize the early stages of breakthrough. The Judgment counsels: \"Difficulty at the beginning works supreme success, furthering through perseverance. Nothing should be undertaken.\" The advice seems paradoxical—success through not undertaking—until you stand in that crowded street and recognize that forcing order onto chaos breeds more chaos. The Image Text offers different counsel: \"Clouds and thunder: the image of difficulty at the beginning. Thus the superior man brings order out of confusion.\" Not through aggressive action but through patient organization, appointing helpers, allowing structure to emerge from the situation itself. The artist documented this moment when Five Points existed but had not yet calcified into its later infamy. In the I-Ching's sequence, Zhūn comes third, after the pure yang of Qián and pure yin of Kūn—their first mixture produces this generative turbulence, the necessary difficulty when any new thing pushes into existence.

References & Citations

  1. The Five Points — Unknown Artist-ca. 1827. This watercolor depicts the Five Points, a notorious New York slum district in the 1820s. The chaotic street scene shows the difficult conditions and social disorder that characterize the early stages of breakthrough.

The Judgment

Difficulty at the Beginning works supreme success, furthering through perseverance. Nothing should be undertaken lightly. It furthers one to appoint helpers. Flynn doesn't try to defeat the MCP on day one. He finds Tron. He finds Ram. He learns the system.

zhūnrallying
yuánfirst-rate
hēngfulfillment
worthwhile
zhēnto be persistent
not at all
yònguseful
yǒuto have
yōusomewhere
wǎngto go
worthwhile
jiànto enlist
hóudelegates

The Image

Clouds and thunder: the image of Difficulty at the Beginning. The superior man brings order out of confusion. The skilled programmer looks at the error logs, understands the stack trace, sees the order implicit in the chaos. Then systematically debugs.

yúnclouds
léithunder
zhūnrallying
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
jīngsorts
lúnweft

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1磐桓利居貞利建侯

páncliffs
huánall around
worthwhile
to stay
zhēnpersistence
worthwhile
jiànto enlist
hóudelegates

Line 2屯如邅如乘馬班如匪寇婚媾女子貞不字十年乃字

zhūnsummoning help
it may seems
zhānturning around
is the same as
chénga team of four
horses
bānarrayed
alike
fěiit
kòuassailant
hūnmarital
gòusuitor
lady
young
zhēndetermined
no
babies
shíten more
niányears
nǎiand
babies

Line 3即鹿無虞惟入于林中君子幾不如舍往吝

pursue
鹿deer
without
preparation
wéiall alone
entering
into
línforest's
zhōnginterior
jūnnoble
young one
discerning
this
the same thing as
shěgiving up
wǎngto go
lìnembarrassing

Line 4乘馬班如求婚媾往吉無不利

chénga team of four
horses
bānarrayed
alike
qiúquest
hūnmarital
gòusuitor
wǎngto go forward
promising
without
doubt
worthwhile

Line 5屯其膏小貞吉大貞凶

zhūnpulling together
one's
gāoriches
xiǎomodest
zhēnpersistence
promising
much
zhēnpersistence
xiōngunfortunate

Line 6乘馬班如泣血漣如

chénga team of four
horses
bānarrayed
alike
tears
xuèof blood
liánflowing
as if

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Thunder (☳) below pushing upward, Water (☵) above pressing downward—energy rising into danger.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes this as the moment when heaven and earth first meet to produce individual beings. Everything is in chaotic motion, like a thunderstorm.

Character Analysis

Thunder rises (arousing force, creative impulse), Water descends (danger, the unknown). They meet in turbulent profusion. The spring gushes but doesn't yet know where it flows. The program compiles but crashes on first run. Natural.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Thunder

Upper Trigram

Water

Binary

100010

Energy State

Upward thrust meeting downward danger. Read bottom to top: yang pushing at bottom, uncertainty and hazard blocking above.

Trigram Symbolism

☵ Water (Upper) - The Abysmal, danger, the unknown ☳ Thunder (Lower) - The Arousing, movement, initiative Initial meeting produces chaos.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.