Daily Oracle

I Ching Daily Guidance

Tune into the moment with the Wilhelm/Baynes three-coin method. Set each line from the ground up or let the oracle toss for you—insight arrives either way.

Guidance & tips

Preparing Your Cast

  • Work from the bottom line upward—Line 1 anchors the hexagram.
  • Each coin toss produces 0–3 heads. Tails are counted automatically.
  • Solid lines represent yang (movement); broken lines show yin (receptive).

Coin Method Quick Math

  • Heads count as 3, tails count as 2—sum to find each line.
  • 6 = old yin (changing to yang); 7 = young yang; 8 = young yin; 9 = old yang (changing to yin).
  • Changing lines reveal a relating hexagram—trace both for nuance.

Cast your lines

Follow the sequence below—each choice updates instantly.

Line Progress 0 / 6 lines set
Explore the 64 hexagrams
Use this lookup to cross-reference the primary and relating trigrams. Lower trigrams run along the rows; upper trigrams span the columns.
Hexagram numbers by lower (rows) and upper (columns) trigram combinations