Hexagram 52: Gen -

Keeping Still
Fine Art
Johannes Vermeer — Girl with a Wine Glass

Johannes Vermeer — Girl with a Wine Glass

Johannes Vermeer (1660)

Moment of stillness and restraint in social interaction.

Practical Integration

Northern Song court painter Guo Xi created this monumental hanging scroll in 1072, depicting towering mountains in early spring mist. Peaks rise in layers through atmospheric perspective, each crag motionless against shifting clouds. The composition uses multiple viewpoints simultaneously—what Guo Xi called the \"angle of totality\"—allowing the eye to climb from valley streams through middle slopes to distant summits. Trees cling to rocky outcrops. Waterfalls trace vertical lines down cliff faces. Everything ascends, yet nothing moves. The mountain simply is. This is Gèn (艮), the Chinese hexagram of Keeping Still. The character shows a watchful eye looking backward, suggesting reflective awareness that halts forward motion. Ancient diviners saw this configuration when Mountain (Gèn) doubles upon itself: stillness above, stillness below, motionless peaks reinforcing absolute rest. Guo Xi's mountains demonstrate this principle through visual form—the painting invites contemplative viewing where the observer's eye moves while the subject remains utterly static. The mountain teaches through its refusal to act. Moment of stillness and restraint in social interaction. The Judgment text offers paradoxical instruction: \"Keeping Still. Keeping his back still so that he no longer feels his body. He goes into his courtyard and does not see his people. No blame.\" The ancient text describes meditation's inward focus—by stilling the body completely, consciousness detaches from physical sensation. Guo Xi painted mountains as objects for this practice. Song Dynasty literati would hang such scrolls in study halls, using them to cultivate mountain-like composure. The viewer sits before the painted peaks, learning stillness from stillness. Zhou Dynasty diviners understood this hexagram appeared when the wise response involved non-action, when movement in any direction would disturb necessary equilibrium. The Image Text declares: \"Mountains standing close together: the image of Keeping Still. Thus the superior man does not permit his thoughts to go beyond his situation.\" The doubled mountain creates an image of layered stability—each peak reinforces the next, building depth through repetition of the same form. Buddhist and Daoist meditation practices found deep resonance with this hexagram. In the sequence, Keeping Still follows The Arousing: after thunder's shocking movement comes the mountain's profound rest, yang energy returning to stillness after vigorous expression.

References & Citations

  1. Girl with a Wine Glass — Johannes Vermeer-1660. Moment of stillness and restraint in social interaction.

The Judgment

KEEPING STILL. Keeping his back still So that he no longer feels his body. He goes into his courtyard And does not see his people. No blame.

gènkeep
about
bèiback
there is no
huòa grasp
by
shēnselfhood
xíngmove
about
tíngcourtyard
but
jiànsee
one's own
rénpeople
but no
jiùblame

The Image

Mountains standing close together: The image of KEEPING STILL. Thus the superior man Does not permit his thoughts to go beyond his situation.

jiānconnected
shānmountains
gènstillness
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
thinks of
nothing
chūbeyond
this
wèiplace

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1艮其趾無咎利永貞

gènstillness
in one's own
zhǐtoes
no
jiùblame
worth
yǒnglasting
zhēnpersistence

Line 2艮其腓不拯其隨其心不快

gènstillness
in one's own
féicalves
this does
zhěnghelping
in
suípursuits
this one's
xīnheart
is not
kuàihappy

Line 3艮其限列其夤厲薰心

gènstill
in
xiànboundaries
lièseparate
up in
yínloins
harshness
xūnchoke
xīnthe heart

Line 4艮其身無咎

gènstillness
in
shēnselfhood
no
jiùblame

Line 5艮其輔言有序悔亡

gènstillness
in one's own
jawbones
yánspeech
yǒuhas
meaningful order
huǐregrets
wángpass

Line 6敦艮吉

dūnauthentic
gènstillness
promising

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

The character 艮 (gèn) in oracle bone script depicted a person turning to look backward—an eye gazing over the shoulder, suggesting stillness through self-awareness and introspection.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Keeping Still (艮 gèn) represents the mountain: stability, meditation, boundaries. In divination, it counsels finding the interior point of stillness even amid external motion—not freezing action, but achieving centered presence that allows wise inaction or deliberate pause.

Character Analysis

Mountain over Mountain. The hexagram of doubled stability. When both trigrams are Mountain (☶☶), the teaching intensifies: true stillness isn't rigidity but the mountain's quality of remaining centered while seasons change around it. Miyazaki's flooded train sequence embodies this perfectly—motion continues (train, water, poles passing) while Chihiro finds interior mountain-stillness.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Mountain

Upper Trigram

Mountain

Binary

001001

Energy State

Stillness doubled, meditation, interior centering. Yin containing yang, movement held in perfect balance.

Trigram Symbolism

☶ Mountain (Upper) - Keeping Still, Meditation, Youngest Son, Earth ☶ Mountain (Lower) - Keeping Still, Meditation, Youngest Son, Earth Mountain over Mountain: stillness so complete it becomes the foundation for transformation. The superior man does not permit his thoughts to go beyond his situation—fully present, not grasping.

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