I Ching, Yijing or Zhou Yi
"Oracle of the moon": © 2000 LiSe
“Qián-Qián”, can be translated as “all day long creatively active” or “to strive ceaselessly”. Qián is an image of sunrise. When Qián is repeated, it symbolizes the cycle of time, the relentless never-ending movement of Heaven. Following it gives you the right timing. When you emulate it, the symbol extends to the strong mind, the leader who pursues his/her purpose relentlessly.
Dedicating yourself entirely to your ideal or task will bring success. When you follow Heaven's example, Heaven will enable you to outline structures beyond your imagination. The mind is much larger than anyone can know, explore this treasure, push your limits but don't go too far. It can be cold out there.
Qián brings and spreads creativity and ideas with a good base, it twines the cords and warps the loom, it is the substrate that gives structure and meaning to everything. But without yin, which weaves the weft and fills the warp with life, it is too early to materialize ideas, no matter their quality or how determined you are.
This is the short answer - click for the complete one (with 'your' helpers).
About the 3 lines of the trigrams and the helpers:
Each line, active or at rest, summons one of the 8 trigrams as a Helper. For an activated line: telling you what you need - or about a problem area or something to avoid.
For a stationary line: this is what you already have or do or what you don't need. Often we just need a reminder of our abilities. Or it could be what you wish or fear - but will not happen.
Active lines are the helpers to change things, they listen to intentions, which can come from you, surroundings, or fate. Stationary helpers are part of the core meaning, they are your soul talking, but they also see the impossibilities or what is lacking at the moment. They reinforce the overall power of a reading.