Bob Schwartz

Tag: Oreos

Oreo I Ching

On the plate I saw my usual desert of four Oreos, two chocolate, two golden.

Binary, I thought. Dark and light. The digital universe is binary: zero and one. Morse code is binary: dot and dash.

The I Ching is binary: broken line (yin, dark) and solid line (yang, light). Six lines stacked, sixty-four combinations (hexagrams).

Instead of broken and solid lines, what if we stack six chocolate and golden Oreos? Oreo I Ching.

Which I did. The above picture represents Hexagram 27, Nourishing.


27
Yi • Nourishing

DECISION

Nourishing.
Being steadfast and upright: good fortune.
Watch your nourishment;
Pay attention to what is in your mouth.

SIGNIFICANCE

This gua outlines the principle of nourishing. In ancient times, the Chinese concept of nourishing included nurturing, especially nurturing one’s virtue. To the ancient Chinese, nourishing without nurturing was the way of animals. The revered sage Mencius says,

Filling with food,
Warming with clothes,
Living leisurely without learning,
It is little short of animals.


If you consult the I Ching, occasionally or regularly, consider using Oreos, or the cookies of your choice, to represent your hexagram. When you are done, you can enjoy a sweet treat along with the valuable advice.

© 2025 by Bob Schwartz

A time to eat more cookies?

I eat a healthy diet. I do not overeat. I do not stress eat. I do not have a particularly sweet tooth.

Lately I’ve noticed a small increase in my cookie eating. Not a big increase, just a few more at a time. Small but noticeable.

It may be these times. Things are stranger than usual, probably stranger than they have been in a long, long time. All signs are that things may be getting stranger soon and for a while.

Oreos don’t correct or solve any of the strangeness. But as we look forward to things getting a lot less strange, a little more chocolate, a little more sweetness, can go a long way.

© 2025 by Bob Schwartz