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Go When You Know
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"He who is brave in daring will be killed,
He who is brave in not daring will survive."
— Tao Te Ching

In a lifetime, and in the course of a day, we often find ourselves at a binary nexus, a choice between zero and one, between yes and no. This card indicates such a nexus and reminds us that sometimes, no is the more powerful decision that saves our power from premature or otherwise wasteful expenditure. As Goethe said, "A master first reveals himself by his ability to hold back." Similarly, a Zen archer hits the mark because she holds the arrow back until just the right moment.

In other cases, the powerful choice is yes, 1, on, go. From the I Ching point of view, the time to go forward with any major choice is when a deep inner knowing tells you it is time. The Self (the totality of all psychic structures) and global intuition are best qualified to make such choices. The mind and ego can be involved but should not be the rulers of the process because it is above their level of competence. When the mind-ego alliance is in charge of decisions, you tend to get that ping-pong game sort of dialog in your head: "But what about this? But what about that? But what if this happens?" etc. In the hierarchy of psychic structures, the Self is the ruler, and the mind and ego are like the ministers, the cabinet members or facilitators. Once you've made the big decision, mind and ego are crucial to work on implementation.

If you're still in doubt about a decision, the I Ching advice is to hold back — don't go until you know. In most cases, you're better off maintaining the present position until you're sure.

A classic illustration of these principles involves romantic relationships. A mind-and-ego-dominated person tells himself, "Well, I have to be going out with someone — what about this person? What about that person?" A merchant mind kicks in, like someone anxiously scanning personal ads or evaluating merchandise: "Well, this one likes candlelit dinners, but this one is taller. But this one seems more reliable. But this one…" From my point of view, the default position for the conscious person is solitude, often the most powerful place to be, but with a willingness to come forward into a relationship, ready to give it all the incredible energy and attention it is going to take when called to do so from the depths of one's being. You wait for the soulmates and spiritual allies, recognize that all relationships have problematic phases, and take a lot of care and resources. You don't go forward into a random relationship out of the lonely restlessness of the social ego, which is addicted to social matrix noise and anxious to fill space with a body, chatter, or whatever. By endlessly distracting yourself with superficial relationships, you may miss out on the soulful ones.

It is the same with career choices, major relocations, and big plans. The ego loves decisive action, hates to wait in ambiguity and ambivalence, and wants some sweeping change that will supposedly resolve everything. One of the greatest assets of a mature person is the ability to be at rest with ambiguity and ambivalence. A little mind can't stay open to uncertainty and reaches for premature closure, becoming a true believer in something, a religion, or secular fundamentalism.

Be tolerant of ambiguity, ambivalence, and uncertainty. These are our constant and familiar life companions that help us learn, offering us a world more complex and mysterious than a checkerboard. Wait until you really know, then throw the switch and don't look back.