Man, lemme tell you about this whole I Ching thing. For years, I kinda heard about it, seen it pop up in weird places, but always thought it was just some super old mumbo jumbo, you know? Like, ancient Chinese fortune-telling, no way that actually works. My buddy, he was always messing with it, tossing coins, looking up stuff. He kept telling me, “Dude, it’s not fortune-telling, it’s about understanding the moment, getting a different perspective.” And I just shrugged him off, kept doing my own thing, running into the same walls over and over.
Then, one really rough year hits. Everything felt off. Work was a mess, personal stuff was a mess, my brain was just a giant knot. I was just stuck. Really, truly stuck. One night, after probably too much coffee and staring at my ceiling, I remembered my buddy’s constant nagging. Figured, what’s the harm? I was desperate. So I shot him a text, “Hey, that I Ching thing… how do you even start?”
He was stoked, obviously. He sent me a link to some old online tool, told me to grab three identical coins. I dug through my junk drawer, found some quarters. He said, “Just ask a clear question, really focus on it, and then toss the coins six times.” So I did. My first question was super basic: “What am I supposed to do about this current mess at work?” I tossed, I counted, I wrote down the lines. It felt kinda silly, honestly. Then I went to look up the hexagram. And man, that first reading? It wasn’t some magical answer, just a couple of lines of cryptic text. I stared at it, felt even more confused than before. “This is what he was talking about?” I thought.
I almost gave up right there. But something, maybe just the sheer desperation, made me keep at it. I tried again the next day. And the day after. I started digging around more online, trying to find different interpretations, different ways people used it. There were so many books, so many websites, all saying slightly different things. It was a complete jungle. For weeks, I was just reading, tossing, reading again, trying to piece it all together. I felt like I was back in college, trying to understand a super dry textbook.

My Own “27 I Ching” Breakthrough
Here’s where the “27 I Ching” part came in, though it wasn’t called that then. I realized that just one reading, one hexagram, often felt too thin. It was like getting one word of a complex sentence. My buddy had mentioned something about looking at the “changing lines” and getting a “resulting hexagram.” But even that felt like I was missing something big. I started experimenting. What if I asked a question, got my initial hexagram, and then asked another question about that hexagram? Or what if I tried to interpret the changing lines not just as a transition, but as a separate, mini-reading? This led me down a rabbit hole of trying to find patterns in different types of questions and how they linked up to subsequent readings.
- I started by tossing for the main situation.
- Then, I’d immediately toss again, but this time asking, “What’s the obstacle I’m facing here?”
- After that, a third toss: “What’s the best way to move forward?”
It was never strictly 3. Sometimes it organically became 5 readings for one big problem. Sometimes it was just one simple toss. But I noticed that when I felt really stuck, approaching it from multiple angles, like getting 3, 5, or even 7 specific “sub-readings” around one core issue, gave me this really rich, layered picture. It was like I was taking the situation, twisting it in my hands, looking at it from every single side. I’m not talking about 27 separate readings. I’m talking about a multi-faceted inquiry that, in my head, felt like I was using 27 different lenses to zoom in on the issue. It wasn’t a rigid system; it was a flexible framework I built for myself, based on instinct and trial-and-error.
I’d write everything down in a notebook. The original question, each subsequent question, the lines, and then my raw, messy interpretation. I’d let it simmer. Sometimes it’d make sense days later. Sometimes a phrase would just jump out at me, almost like a whisper in my ear, and suddenly, boom, clarity. It wasn’t about getting a “yes” or “no” answer. It was about seeing the pattern, understanding the forces at play, getting a nudge in a direction I hadn’t considered.
Getting the Real Answers
One time, I was totally agonizing over a job offer. Good money, but the vibe felt off. My “27 I Ching” routine told me a lot about “holding firm,” “not grasping blindly,” and “seeking true alignment.” It was a lot of repeated messages across those multiple readings that basically screamed, “This ain’t it, chief.” I ended up turning it down, which felt completely insane at the time given my finances. But I followed that feeling, guided by those layered readings. A few months later, I heard that company went through a huge restructuring and laid off half its new hires. Dodger a bullet, big time. I mean, sure, it could have been a coincidence. But it felt like those readings gave me the courage to trust my gut when everything else was yelling at me to take the money.
Another time, I was in a bad spot with a friend. We had a huge misunderstanding, and I didn’t know whether to push for a resolution or just let it cool off. My readings kept hitting on themes of “retreat,” “patience,” and “allowing space for growth.” It wasn’t about ignoring the problem, but about when and how to approach it. So I held back. I let things breathe. And after a few weeks, the friend actually reached out, completely on their own, and apologized. If I had pushed it, I’m pretty sure it would have blown up even worse. Those readings just gave me the confidence to step back when my instinct was to jump in and “fix” things immediately.
It’s not magic, okay? It’s not some crystal ball. What I figured out, what I mastered in my own clumsy way with this “27 I Ching” blend, is that it’s a tool for cutting through your own noise. It forces you to articulate your questions. It forces you to slow down and consider possibilities you might be blind to because you’re so caught up in your own head. The answers aren’t really in the book, they’re in you. The I Ching just kicks the door open a little so you can see them.
I still use it. Not every day, not for every little thing. But when I’m really, truly stuck, when my brain is just doing loops, I pull out my coins, I open my old notebook, and I start tossing. It’s become this weird, reliable companion, helping me navigate the tricky bits of life. It’s just another way to talk to myself, I guess, but with a really wise, really old friend whispering back.
