How I Fixed My Screwed-Up Family Life Using a 3,000-Year-Old Blueprint
Man, let me tell you, for the longest time, my house wasn’t a home; it was a poorly managed startup where everyone was the CEO, and nobody was the janitor. We were fighting constantly. Not big, dramatic fights, just this low-grade, constant friction. Kids ignored chores, my wife and I were passing each other like ships in the night, and my aging folks thought they still had veto power over every damn decision we made.
I thought, “Okay, communication must be the problem.” So I grabbed every self-help book I could find. Active listening, I-statements, conflict resolution—we tried it all. It helped for maybe three days, then we reverted right back to yelling over who forgot to pay the electricity bill.
The turning point, the thing that forced me to stop reading the quick fixes and actually dig deep, happened during the summer of ’22. My son needed braces, which was already stressing us out financially. Then my mother-in-law had a minor fall and needed someone to check on her daily. My wife, bless her heart, was trying to manage her full-time job, shuttling the kids, and dealing with her mom. I was busy trying to pull 70-hour weeks because, you know, money.
One Tuesday night, she sent me a text—a simple “Can you pick up Leo from soccer?” I was swamped, missed it by 15 minutes, and Leo ended up sitting in the rain waiting. When I finally got home at 10 PM, the atmosphere was frozen. My wife didn’t scream. She didn’t cry. She just looked at me and said, “I can’t do this anymore. We live in the same house, but you’re a stranger, and I’m exhausted.”

That hit me like a truck. I realized it wasn’t about how we talked; it was about the fundamental structure—or lack thereof—of our unit. We had zero order. We were all pulling different directions. I literally felt like I was failing at the most important job I had: being a husband and father.
I didn’t go looking for ancient philosophy; I was just looking for answers that actually stuck. I was online late that night, feeling desperate, and somehow I stumbled onto a forum discussing organization and governance, and someone casually mentioned Hexagram 37, Jia Ren (The Family/Clan). I initially scoffed, thinking, “Oh great, magic fortune telling.” But I started reading the commentary, and suddenly, it clicked. This wasn’t mystical junk; it was a blueprint for social organization.
The core message of Hexagram 37 is that order starts internally and must be maintained by clarity and sincerity. It talks about defining roles—the father as the solid provider, the mother as the steady partner, and the children as the respectful future. We didn’t have roles; we just had stress buckets we threw at each other.
So, I decided to stop practicing communication techniques and start enforcing structure. This wasn’t gentle. I had to force the issue.
My Practice Steps: Implementing the Hexagram 37 Framework
The first thing I did was call a forced family meeting—no phones, no TV, just sitting at the dining room table. I put my cards out. I admitted I was failing, but I also stated that the current chaos wasn’t sustainable for anyone.
The next step was painful but necessary: I wrote down the hierarchy and defined responsibilities. Yeah, I literally wrote it down, like a company memo. People hated it at first. My 14-year-old scoffed. My wife was skeptical.
- Defined the Core Governance: My wife and I agreed we were the executive officers. If we disagree, we discuss it privately, but in front of the kids, we present a united front. This stopped the kids from playing us against each other, which they had perfected.
- Assigned Specific, Non-Negotiable Roles: I took 100% ownership of finance and external maintenance (cars, yard, big repairs). My wife took 100% ownership of internal organization (kid schedules, grocery planning, bills). If I mess up the car oil change, that’s my fault alone. If she messes up the dinner menu, that’s hers. No shifting blame.
- Implemented the “Sincerity Rule”: This comes right from the Hexagram’s imagery—the fire originating from the hearth. It means our actions have to be genuine, not just compliant. We started having a mandatory 15-minute check-in every night, not about tasks, but about how we felt. I forced myself to actually listen, not just plan my response.
- Empowered the Kids with Defined Contribution: They weren’t just “helping out.” Their assigned weekly chores (laundry, dish unloading) were now framed as their non-negotiable contribution to the overall stability of the clan. If the clothes weren’t done, their life suffered (no clean socks), and I didn’t step in to fix it.
For the first month, it was a battle. There was pushback. But because the roles were clear and consistently enforced—that’s the key, consistency—the friction started to lessen. When my daughter tried to argue with me about laundry, I just pointed to the written list on the fridge that we all signed off on. I removed the emotion and replaced it with procedure.
What I realized is that when the structure is solid, the communication flows naturally. We stopped having endless, rambling arguments because the boundaries were fixed. We didn’t need to discuss who should do the dishes; the chart told us.
The outcome today? The house is calmer than it’s ever been. We still have stress, of course. We’re human. But when stress hits, we don’t splinter into chaos. We fall back onto the roles we established. My wife looks at me differently now; she trusts that when I say I’ll handle something, it’s handled, because it’s my defined duty. And I trust her completely with the internal logistics.
I had to learn the hard way that you don’t improve family communication by mastering talking techniques. You improve it by building a foundation of clear roles and duties—a solid structure that removes ambiguity. Hexagram 37 wasn’t magic; it was just the ancient realization that every stable unit needs governance. And once I implemented that order, the love and respect we had for each other finally had room to breathe.
If your family feels like a mess, stop looking for better words. Start looking for better borders. It was a brutal but necessary journey to realizing that stability isn’t automatic; you have to enforce it.
