Man, let me tell you. Earlier this year, I was proper stuck. Not just “stuck in traffic” stuck, but full-blown, waking up at 3 AM with dread, stuck. My job was turning toxic—micromanagement everywhere, zero appreciation, and the pay barely covered the stupid rent. Every day I dragged myself out of bed felt like wading through cement. I was mentally exhausted, financially stretched, and frankly, furious all the time.
I tried all the usual crap—meditation, reading self-help books, updating my resume on LinkedIn, which just felt pathetic. Nothing shifted. I kept trying to fix the external mess by yelling louder or working harder, but it only made me crash harder. I needed a clear path, not just fluffy advice. Then I remembered that old I Ching book sitting on my shelf. I’ve always used it for big picture stuff, but I figured, screw it, let’s ask about this daily grind. I grabbed three old coins—a penny, a nickel, a dime, real sophisticated stuff—and started throwing. I was looking for a tactical retreat plan.
Consulting the Oracle: Recognition of Exhaustion
The answer came back clear: Hexagram 47. K’un. Oppression. Exhaustion. Being trapped. When I first read the Judgment, my heart sank. It said something like, “Difficulty in crossing the great water. Perseverance of the superior man brings good fortune. He has nothing to blame.” Wait, nothing to blame? That pissed me off. I wanted to blame my idiot boss, the economy, the universe. But the core message hit me: I was trapped because I was trying to fight a restriction that was too big for me to handle right now. The I Ching wasn’t saying I deserved it; it was saying that my current strategy—direct confrontation—was guaranteed to fail and only deplete my energy faster.
I realized I had been trying to fix the external situation by applying more pressure, which was just exhausting me further. The I Ching was screaming: STOP FIGHTING. RETREAT. CONSERVE. The key to beating hard times easily isn’t about crushing the difficulty; it’s about making sure the difficulty can’t crush you. So, I formulated a strict, immediate action plan based on that simple, harsh diagnosis.

The Practice Record: Implementing the Internal Retreat
This wasn’t about finding a new job right away; it was about stopping the mental bleeding first. I acted fast, focusing solely on preserving my own damn resources. If I was stuck in the well (the imagery of 47), I needed to stop thrashing and start figuring out how to survive the wait.
- Step 1: Shut Down External Leaks. I immediately cut off all non-essential expenditures. Not just big stuff, but the constant small drains. No more expensive take-out coffee; I started brewing swill at home. I stopped subscribing to two streaming services I barely watched and canceled the fancy gym membership. This wasn’t about saving a fortune, it was about proving to myself I was regaining control of something small and tangible every single day.
- Step 2: Silence the Noise. The hexagram suggested that when oppressed, unnecessary communication or crying for help just drains you. The hardest part was I stopped complaining to everyone who would listen. Every time I started to vent about the job, I literally bit my tongue. I needed that energy back. Instead, I focused that suppressed frustration on learning one new, totally useless skill online—a distraction that felt productive. I chose basic Python scripting, something totally unrelated to my actual job drama.
- Step 3: Minimum Viable Effort at the Oppressor. At work, I dialed everything back to 80%. Not enough to get fired, but enough to not kill myself trying to impress people who didn’t care. I set strict boundaries: no emails after 6 PM, period. If the work couldn’t get done in 8 hours, it wasn’t my problem anymore. This wasn’t laziness; it was self-defense. I preserved my mental fuel by refusing to burn it for a cause that was killing me.
The Result: Dissolving the Oppression
Here’s the thing about exhaustion: when you stop feeding the fire with panic and external struggle, the fuel runs out, and the whole situation has to change. Because I wasn’t constantly burning energy trying to fix the unfixable, I started seeing gaps. I started recognizing small opportunities instead of just big problems. My mind was finally quiet enough to see them.
That useless Python scripting I was doing? It ended up being exactly what I needed. A former colleague who had left my toxic company contacted me, totally out of the blue. He needed someone with specific, niche scripting knowledge for a side gig that could turn full-time. Because I hadn’t spent the last six weeks whining, fighting the old job, and totally burning out, I had the mental bandwidth to nail the interview and negotiate a better rate. I handed in my resignation three weeks later.
The whole oppressive job scenario didn’t vanish in a single dramatic explosion. It dissolved slowly because I internally pulled my energy out of the fight. It wasn’t “easy” in the sense that I didn’t work hard, but it was “easy” because I stopped slamming my head against a locked door. I stopped fighting the circumstance and started building a raft instead. That’s the real trick of I Ching 47: When you’re trapped, the way out isn’t through the bars; it’s through quietly becoming less dependent on the cage. If you’re stuck right now, stop trying to win the current fight. Just figure out how to conserve your own damn resources and build something new in the quiet corners of your mind. It works. Trust me on this one. I lived it.
