Hexagram 36: Ming Yi (Darkening of the Light, 明夷) - Light Wounded

BY NICOLE LAU

Ming Yi (明夷, Darkening of the Light) is Hexagram 36 in the I Ching, following Jin (Progress). With binary encoding 000101, Ming Yi represents light wounded, brightness concealed, and the wisdom of hiding one's light in dark times. This is not defeat but strategic concealment - the sun setting beneath earth, the wise person hiding brilliance to survive persecution, maintaining inner light while outwardly yielding. Understanding Ming Yi is understanding that sometimes brightness must be hidden, that survival requires concealing truth, and that inner light can be preserved even when outer expression is suppressed.

Traditional Interpretation

Classical I Ching texts describe Ming Yi as "Darkening of the Light" or "The Bright Light Wounded." The characters 明夷 depict bright/light (明) and wounded/barbarian (夷) - light injured, brightness suppressed. Key attributes: Concealment (隐藏, yin cang) - hiding light, not displaying. Persecution (迫害, po hai) - dark forces suppressing brightness. Endurance (忍耐, ren nai) - bearing difficulty patiently. Inner light (内在光明, nei zai guang ming) - maintaining truth within. The Judgment: "Darkening of the Light. In adversity it furthers one to be persevering." Light wounded but perseverance in adversity succeeds. The Image: "The light has sunk into the earth: the image of Darkening of the Light. Thus does the superior person live with the great mass: he veils his light, yet still shines." Sun beneath earth - hide brightness but maintain inner light.

Binary Encoding: 000101

In binary: 000101. In decimal: 5. Structure: Lines 1-3: Yang-Yin-Yang (101) - fire below. Lines 4-6: Yin-Yin-Yin (000) - earth above. Earth above fire - darkness covering light, brightness suppressed. Fire (light) hidden beneath earth (darkness). This is the structure of darkening: light wounded, concealed, but still present within.

Yin-Yang Dynamics

Yang (light) suppressed by yin (darkness). Earth above Fire - Ming Yi's upper trigram is Kun (Earth, ☷, 000), lower is Li (Fire, ☲, 101). Earth above fire - sun setting, light sinking into earth. Darkness covering brightness. Opposite of Jin (sun rising) - here sun is setting, light being suppressed.

Modern Applications

Persecution: Oppression - Ming Yi is living under tyranny, suppression. Censorship - truth must be hidden. Discrimination - hiding identity to survive. Strategic: Laying low - concealing abilities in hostile environment. Undercover - hiding true purpose. Survival - yielding outwardly while preserving inner truth. Personal: Depression - inner light suppressed by outer darkness. Hiding talents - not safe to shine. Enduring hardship - maintaining hope despite adversity.

Systems Science Framework

Ming Yi is system under suppression - external constraints limiting expression. Hidden order - structure present but not visible. Resilience through concealment - preserving core by hiding it. Dormancy - active potential in inactive state. Waiting for conditions to change - light will rise again when darkness lifts.

Practical Guidance

When Ming Yi appears: Light is wounded. Dark times. Don't display brightness - will attract persecution. Veil your light but maintain it within. Live with the great mass - blend in, don't stand out. Persevere in adversity - this is temporary. Inner light remains even when outer expression is suppressed. Like sun beneath earth - still shining, just hidden. Wait for conditions to change. Survive by concealing, preserve by yielding outwardly while maintaining truth inwardly.

Conclusion

Ming Yi (000101) teaches: Sometimes brightness must be hidden. Survival requires concealing truth in dark times. Inner light can be preserved even when outer expression is suppressed. Veil your light but maintain it within. After progress and rising (Jin) comes darkening of light (Ming Yi). This is the cycle: sun rises, sun sets. Light advances, light retreats. Earth above fire. Darkness covering brightness. But light endures within. This is the wisdom of concealment.


This is Article 98 of the I Ching Hexagram Dynamics series. — Nicole Lau

As you sit with the gentle yet powerful energy of Ming Yi, remember that even in times of obscured light, your inner radiance can deepen and transform through intentional practice. To honor this journey of inner illumination, you might explore the 40 manifestation rituals intention to reality to gently coax your intentions from shadow into form, or let the 13 new moon rituals lunar beginnings guide you in planting seeds of renewal when the world feels dim. For those drawn to self-inquiry, the tarot journaling prompts 100 questions for self discovery can illuminate hidden truths, while the 30 day tarot practice workbook offers a structured path to refining your intuitive voice. And when you need to clear the fog from your emotional field, the emotional filter ritual printable spell kit provides a gentle, sacred space to filter what no longer serves, allowing your own wounded light to emerge, wiser and more resilient than before.

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Nicole Lau — UK certified Advanced Angel Healing Practitioner, PhD in Management, published author.

She built Mystic Ryst on a single belief: that spiritual practice doesn't require a retreat or a perfect moment. It belongs in the ordinary — in the morning before work, in the breath between meetings, in the objects you choose to surround yourself with.

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