When we go from the 1st line to the 4th line (only part of the 4th line), this is a right angle cross which is about personal destiny. It has its own sub theme, and the sub theme is the profile itself. If you have the 45.3 and the design 5th line, you will have the right angle cross of rulership, but it's the foundation cross of adaptation. That is the common structure throughout all the hexagrams. And finally you get to the left angle, with 5/1, 5/2, 6/2, 6/3: Confrontation.Įach hexagram is broken up into these three different aspects, there is going to be 7 right angle variations, 1 juxtaposition and 4 left angle variations. It has a different name and is a very different structure because the hexagram structure has changed. This is the juxtaposition cross of Possession. Then you get to the juxtaposition here you have only the 4/1.
For example, the 26-45-22-47 cross given above is the right angle cross of rulership, which has various themes in it. In any given hexagram you have 3 different cross names. They've got their own personal destiny!Īs you go around the wheel of the Mandala, for each hexagram you have 12 crosses that are involved and every cross has a name. For example if you are raising a child with a right angle and you expect them to be deeply socially involved you're in trouble. It's important to see that we have specific geometries, which means limitations. Most people are going to live out either their personal destiny or their transpersonal karma.
If they are at right angles to each other (all 16 hexagrams apart) they would be called a right angle profile, if they are not then they are either juxtaposition or left angle. What angle a profile is in depends on the arrangement of the gates in the wheel. The profiles are broken into three parts: Right Angle, Juxtaposition and Left Angle.