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- 1
- The tao that can be told
- is not the eternal Tao.
- The name that can be named
- is not the eternal name.
-
- The unnameable is the eternally real.
- Naming is the origin
- of all particular things.
-
- Free from desire, you realize the mystery.
- Caught in desire, you see only the
- manifestations.
-
- Yet mystery and manifestations
- arise from the same source.
- This source is called darkness.
-
- Darkness within darkness.
- The gateway to all understanding.
- *
- 2
- When people see some things as beautiful,
- other things become ugly.
- When people see some things as good,
- other things become bad.
-
- Being and non-being create each other.
- Difficult and easy support each other.
- Long and short define each other.
- High and low depend on each other.
- Before and after follow each other.
-
- Therefore the Master
- acts without doing anything
- and teaches without saying anything.
- Things arise and she lets them come;
- things disappear and she lets them go.
- she has but doesn't expect.
- When her work is done, she forgets it.
- That is why it lasts forever.
- *
- 3
- If you overesteem great men,
- people become powerless.
- If you overvalue possessions,
- people begin to steal.
-
- The Master leads
- by emptying people's minds
- and filling their cores,
- by weakening their ambition
- and toughening their resolve.
- He helps people lose everything
- they know, everything they desire,
- and creates confusion
- in those who think that they know.
-
- Practice not-doing,
- and everything will fall into place.
- *
- 4
- The Tao is like a well:
- used but never used up.
- It is like the eternal void:
- filled with infinite possibilities.
-
- It is hidden but always present.
- I don't know who gave birth to it.
- It is older than God.
- *
- 5
- The Tao doesn't take sides;
- it gives birth to both good and evil.
- The Master doesn't take sides;
- she welcomes both saints and sinners.
-
- The Tao is like a bellows:
- it is empty yet infinitely capable.
- The more you use it, the more it produces;
- the more you talk of it, the less you understand.
-
- Hold on to the center.
- *
- 6
- The Tao is called the Great Mother:
- empty yet inexhaustible,
- it gives birth to infinite worlds.
-
- It is always present within you.
- You can use it any way you want.
- *
- 7
- The Tao is infinite, eternal.
- Why is it eternal?
- It was never born;
- thus it can never die.
- Why is it infinite?
- It has no desires for itself;
- thus it is present for all beings.
-
- The Master stays behind;
- that is why she is ahead.
- She is detached from all things;
- that is why she is one with them.
- Because she has let go of herself,
- she is perfectly fulfilled.
- *
- 8
- The supreme good is like water,
- which nourishes all things without trying to.
- It is content with the low places that people
- disdain.
- Thus it is like the Tao.
-
- In dwelling, live close to the ground.
- In thinking, keep to the simple.
- In conflict, be fair and generous.
- In governing, don't try to control.
- In work, do what you enjoy.
- In family life, be completely present.
-
- When you are content to be simply yourself
- and don't compare or compete,
- everybody will respect you.
- *
- 9
- Fill your bowl to the brim
- and it will spill.
- Keep sharpening your knife
- and it will blunt.
- Chase after money and security
- and your heart will never unclench.
- Care about people's approval
- and you will be their prisoner.
-
- Do your work, then step back.
- The only path to serenity.
- *
- 10
- Can you coax your mind from wandering
- and keep to the original oneness?
- Can you let your body become
- supple as a newborn child's?
- Can you cleanse your inner vision
- until you see nothing but the light?
- Can you love people and lead them
- without imposing your will?
- Can you deal with the most vital matters
- by letting events take their course?
- Can you step back from your own mind
- and thus understand all things?
-
- Giving birth and nourishing,
- having without possessing,
- acting with no expectations,
- leading and not trying to control:
- this is the supreme virtue.
- *
- 11
- We join spokes together in a wheel,
- but it is the center hole
- that makes the wagon move.
-
- We shape clay into a pot,
- but it is the emptiness inside
- that holds whatever we want.
-
- We hammer wood for a house,
- but it is the inner space
- that makes it livable.
-
- We work with being,
- but non-being is what we use.
- *
- 12
- Colors blind the eye.
- Sounds deafen the ear.
- Flavors numb the taste.
- Thoughts weaken the mind.
- Desires wither the heart.
-
- The Master observes the world
- but trusts his inner vision.
- He allows things to come and go.
- His heart is open as the sky.
- *
- 13
- Success is as dangerous as failure.
- Hope is as hollow as fear.
-
- What does it mean that success is as dangerous as
- failure?
- Whether you go up the ladder or down it,
- your position is shaky.
- When you stand with your two feet on the
- ground,
- you will always keep your balance.
-
- What does it mean that hope is as hollow as fear?
- Hope and fear are both phantoms
- that arise from thinking of the self.
- When we don't see the self as self,
- what do we have to fear?
-
- See the world as your self.
- Have faith in the way things are.
- Love the world as your self;
- then you can care for all things.
- *
- 14
- Look, and it can't be seen.
- Listen, and it can't be heard.
- Reach, and it can't be grasped.
-
- Above, it isn't bright.
- Below, it isn't dark.
- Seamless, unnameable,
- it returns to the realm of nothing.
- Form that includes all forms,
- image without an image,
- subtle, beyond all conception.
-
- Approach it and there is no beginning;
- follow it and there is no end.
- You can't know it, but you can be it,
- at ease in your own life.
- Just realize where you come from:
- this is the essence of wisdom.
- *
- 15
- The ancient Masters were profound and subtle.
- Their wisdom was unfathomable.
- There is no way to describe it;
- all we can describe is their appearance.
-
- They were careful
- as someone crossing an iced-over stream.
- Alert as a warrior in enemy territory.
- Courteous as a guest.
- Fluid as melting ice.
- Shapable as a block of wood.
- Receptive as a valley.
- Clear as a glass of water.
-
- Do you have the patience to wait
- till your mud settles and the water is clear?
- Can you remain unmoving
- till the right action arises by itself?
-
- The Master doesn't seek fulfillment.
- Not seeking, not expecting,
- she is present, and can welcome all things.
- *
- 16
- Empty your mind of all thoughts.
- Let your heart be at peace.
- Watch the turmoil of beings,
- but contemplate their return.
-
- Each separate being in the universe
- returns to the common source.
- Returning to the source is serenity.
-
- If you don't realize the source,
- you stumble in confusion and sorrow.
- When you realize where you come from,
- you naturally become tolerant,
- disinterested, amused,
- kindhearted as a grandmother,
- dignified as a king.
- Immersed in the wonder of the Tao,
- you can deal with whatever life brings you,
- and when death comes, you are ready.
- *
- 17
- When the Master governs, the people
- are hardly aware that he exists.
- Next best is a leader who is loved.
- Next, one who is feared.
- The worst is one who is despised.
-
- If you don't trust the people,
- you make them untrustworthy.
-
- The Master doesn't talk, he acts.
- When his work is done,
- the people say, "Amazing:
- we did it, all by ourselves!"
- *
- 18
- When the great Tao is forgotten,
- goodness and piety appear.
- When the body's intelligence declines,
- cleverness and knowledge step forth.
- When there is no peace in the family,
- filial piety begins.
- When the country falls into chaos,
- patriotism is born.
- *
- 19
- Throw away holiness and wisdom,
- and people will be a hundred times happier.
- Throw away morality and justice,
- and people will do the right thing.
- Throw away industry and profit,
- and there won't be any thieves.
-
- If these three aren't enough,
- just stay at the center of the circle
- and let all things take their course.
- *
- 20
- Stop thinking, and end your problems.
- What difference between yes and no?
- What difference between success and failure?
- Must you value what others value,
- avoid what others avoid?
- How ridiculous!
-
- Other people are excited,
- as though they were at a parade.
- I alone don't care,
- I alone am expressionless,
- like an infant before it can smile.
-
- Other people have what they need;
- I alone possess nothing.
- I alone drift about,
- like someone without a home.
- I am like an idiot, my mind is so empty.
-
- Other people are bright;
- I alone am dark.
- Other people are sharp;
- I alone am dull.
-
- Other people have a purpose;
- I alone don't know.
- I drift like a wave on the ocean,
- I blow as aimless as the wind.
-
- I am different from ordinary people.
- I drink from the Great Mother's breasts.
- *
- 21
- The Master keeps her mind
- always at one with the Tao;
- that is what gives her her radiance.
-
- The Tao is ungraspable.
- How can her mind be at one with it?
- Because she doesn't cling to ideas.
-
- The Tao is dark and unfathomable.
- How can it make her radiant?
- Because she lets it.
-
- Since before time and space were,
- the Tao is.
- It is beyond IS and IS NOT.
- How do I know this is true?
- I look inside myself and see.
- *
- 22
- If you want to become whole,
- let yourself be partial.
- If you want to become straight,
- let yourself be crooked.
- If you want to become full,
- let yourself be empty.
- If you want to be reborn,
- let yourself die.
- If you want to be given everything,
- give everything up.
-
- The Master, by residing in the Tao,
- sets an example for all beings.
- Because he doesn't display himself,
- people can see his light.
- Because he has nothing to prove,
- people can trust his words.
- Because he doesn't know who he is,
- people recognize themselves in him.
- Because he has no goal in mind,
- everything he does succeeds.
-
- When the ancient Masters said,
- "If you want to be given everything,
- give everything up,"
- they weren't using empty phrases.
- Only in being lived by the Tao
- can you be truly yourself.
- *
- 23
- Express yourself completely,
- then keep quiet.
- Be like the forces of nature:
- when it blows, there is only wind;
- when it rains, there is only rain;
- when the clouds pass, the sun shines through.
-
- If you open yourself to the Tao,
- you are at one with the Tao
- and you can embody it completely.
- If you open yourself to insight,
- you are at one with insight
- and you can use it completely.
- If you open yourself to loss,
- you are at one with loss
- and you can accept it completely.
-
- Open yourself to the Tao,
- then trust your natural responses;
- and everything will fall into place.
- *
- 24
- He who stands on tiptoe
- doesn't stand firm.
- He who rushes ahead
- doesn't go far.
- He who tries to shine
- dims his own light.
- He who defines himself
- can't know who he really is.
- He who has power over others
- can't empower himself.
- He who clings to his work
- will create nothing that endures.
-
- If you want to accord with the Tao,
- just do your job, then let go.
- *
- 25
- There was something formless and perfect
- before the universe was born.
- It is serene. Empty.
- Solitary. Unchanging.
- Infinite. Eternally present.
- It is the mother of the universe.
- For lack of a better name,
- I call it the Tao.
-
- It flows through all things,
- inside and outside, and returns
- to the origin of all things.
-
- The Tao is great.
- The universe is great.
- Earth is great.
- Man is great.
- These are the four great powers.
-
- Man follows the earth.
- Earth follows the universe.
- The universe follows the Tao.
- The Tao follows only itself.
- *
- 26
- The heavy is the root of the light.
- The unmoved is the source of all movement.
-
- Thus the Master travels all day
- without leaving home.
- However splendid the views,
- she stays serenely in herself.
-
- Why should the lord of the country
- flit about like a fool?
- If you let yourself be blown to and fro,
- you lose touch with your root.
- If you let restlessness move you,
- you lose touch with who you are.
- *
- 27
- A good traveler has no fixed plans
- and is not intent upon arriving.
- A good artist lets his intuition
- lead him wherever it wants.
- A good scientist has freed himself of concepts
- and keeps his mind open to what is.
-
- Thus the Master is available to all people
- and doesn't reject anyone.
- He is ready to use all situations
- and doesn't waste anything.
- This is called embodying the light.
-
- What is a good man but a bad man's teacher?
- What is a bad man but a good man's job?
- If you don't understand this, you will get lost,
- however intelligent you are.
- It is the great secret.
- *
- 28
- Know the male,
- yet keep to the female:
- receive the world in your arms.
- If you receive the world,
- the Tao will never leave you
- and you will be like a little child.
-
- Know the white,
- yet keep to the black:
- be a pattern for the world.
- If you are a pattern for the world,
- the Tao will be strong inside you
- and there will be nothing you can't do.
-
- Know the personal,
- yet keep to the impersonal:
- accept the world as it is.
- If you accept the world,
- the Tao will be luminous inside you
- and you will return to your primal self.
-
- The world is formed from the void,
- like utensils from a block of wood.
-
- The Master knows the utensils,
- yet keeps to the block:
- thus she can use all things.
- *
- 29
- Do you want to improve the world?
- I don't think it can be done.
-
- The world is sacred.
- It can't be improved.
- If you tamper with it, you'll ruin it.
- If you treat it like an object, you'll lose it.
-
- There is a time for being ahead,
- a time for being behind;
- a time for being in motion,
- a time for being at rest;
- a time for being vigorous,
- a time for being exhausted;
- a time for being safe,
- a time for being in danger.
-
- The Master sees things as they are,
- without trying to control them.
- She lets them go their own way,
- and resides at the center of the circle.
- *
- 30
- Whoever relies on the Tao in governing men
- doesn't try to force issues
- or defeat enemies by force of arms.
- For every force there is a counterforce.
- Violence, even well intentioned,
- always rebounds upon oneself.
-
- The Master does his job
- and then stops.
- He understands that the universe
- is forever out of control,
- and that trying to dominate events
- goes against the current of the Tao.
- Because he believes in himself,
- he doesn't try to convince others.
- Because he is content with himself,
- he doesn't need others' approval.
- Because he accepts himself,
- the whole world accepts him.
- *
- 31
- Weapons are the tools of violence;
- all decent men detest them.
-
- Weapons are the tools of fear;
- a decent man will avoid them
- except in the direst necessity
- and, if compelled, will use them
- only with the utmost restraint.
- Peace is his highest value.
- If the peace has been shattered,
- how can he be content?
- His enemies are not demons,
- but human beings like himself.
- He doesn't wish them personal harm.
- Nor does he rejoice in victory.
- How could he rejoice in victory
- and delight in the slaughter of men?
-
- He enters a battle gravely,
- with sorrow and with great compassion,
- as if he were attending a funeral.
- *
- 32
- The Tao can't be perceived.
- Smaller than an electron,
- it contains uncountable galaxies.
-
- If powerful men and women
- could remain centered in the Tao,
- all things would be in harmony.
- The world would become a paradise.
- All people would be at peace,
- and the law would be written in their hearts.
-
- When you have names and forms,
- know that they are provisional.
- When you have institutions,
- know where their functions should end.
- Knowing when to stop,
- you can avoid any danger.
-
- All things end in the Tao
- as rivers flow into the sea.
- *
- 33
- Knowing others is intelligence;
- knowing yourself is true wisdom.
- Mastering others is strength;
- mastering yourself is true power.
-
- If you realize that you have enough,
- you are truly rich.
- If you stay in the center
- and embrace death with your whole heart,
- you will endure forever.
- *
- 34
- The great Tao flows everywhere.
- All things are born from it,
- yet it doesn't create them.
- It pours itself into its work,
- yet it makes no claim.
- It nourishes infinite worlds,
- yet it doesn't hold on to them.
- Since it is merged with all things
- and hidden in their hearts,
- it can be called humble.
- Since all things vanish into it
- and it alone endures,
- it can be called great.
- It isn't aware of its greatness;
- thus it is truly great.
- *
- 35
- She who is centered in the Tao
- can go where she wishes, without danger.
- She perceives the universal harmony,
- even amid great pain,
- because she has found peace in her heart.
-
- Music or the smell of good cooking
- may make people stop and enjoy.
- But words that point to the Tao
- seem monotonous and without flavor.
- When you look for it, there is nothing to see.
- When you listen for it, there is nothing to hear.
- When you use it, it is inexhaustible.
- *
- 36
- If you want to shrink something,
- you must first allow it to expand.
- If you want to get rid of something,
- you must first allow it to flourish.
- If you want to take something,
- you must first allow it to be given.
- This is called the subtle perception
- of the way things are.
-
- The soft overcomes the hard.
- The slow overcomes the fast.
- Let your workings remain a mystery.
- Just show people the results.
- *
- 37
- The Tao never does anything,
- yet through it all things are done.
-
- If powerful men and women
- could center themselves in it,
- the whole world would be transformed
- by itself, in its natural rhythms.
- People would be content
- with their simple, everyday lives,
- in harmony, and free of desire.
-
- When there is no desire,
- all things are at peace.
- *
- 38
- The Master doesn't try to be powerful;
- thus he is truly powerful.
- The ordinary man keeps reaching for power;
- thus he never has enough.
-
- The Master does nothing,
- yet he leaves nothing undone.
- The ordinary man is always doing things,
- yet many more are left to be done.
-
- The kind man does something,
- yet something remains undone.
- The just man does something,
- and leaves many things to be done.
- The moral man does something,
- and when no one responds
- he rolls up his sleeves and uses force.
-
- When the Tao is lost, there is goodness.
- When goodness is lost, there is morality.
- When morality is lost, there is ritual.
- Ritual is the husk of true faith,
- the beginning of chaos.
-
- Therefore the Master concerns himself
- with the depths and not the surface,
- with the fruit and not the flower.
- He has no will of his own.
- He dwells in reality,
- and lets all illusions go.
- *
- 39
- In harmony with the Tao,
- the sky is clear and spacious,
- the earth is solid and full,
- all creatures flourish together,
- content with the way they are,
- endlessly repeating themselves,
- endlessly renewed.
-
- When man interferes with the Tao,
- the sky becomes filthy,
- the earth becomes depleted,
- the equilibrium crumbles,
- creatures become extinct.
-
- The Master views the parts with compassion,
- because he understands the whole.
- His constant practice is humility.
- He doesn't glitter like a jewel
- but lets himself be shaped by the Tao,
- as rugged and common as a stone.
- *
- 40
- Return is the movement of the Tao.
- Yielding is the way of the Tao.
-
- All things are born of being.
- Being is born of non-being.
- *
- 41
- When a superior man hears of the Tao,
- he immediately begins to embody it.
- When an average man hears of the Tao,
- he half believes it, half doubts it.
- When a foolish man hears of the Tao,
- he laughs out loud.
- If he didn't laugh,
- it wouldn't be the Tao.
-
- Thus it is said:
- The path into the light seems dark,
- the path forward seems to go back,
- the direct path seems long,
- true power seems weak,
- true purity seems tarnished,
- true steadfastness seems changeable,
- true clarity seems obscure,
- the greatest art seems unsophisticated,
- the greatest love seems indifferent,
- the greatest wisdom seems childish.
-
- The Tao is nowhere to be found.
- Yet it nourishes and completes all things.
- *
- 42
- The Tao gives birth to One.
- One gives birth to Two.
- Two gives birth to Three.
- Three gives birth to all things.
-
- All things have their backs to the female
- and stand facing the male.
- When male and female combine,
- all things achieve harmony.
-
- Ordinary men hate solitude.
- But the Master makes use of it,
- embracing his aloneness, realizing
- he is one with the whole universe.
- *
- 43
- The gentlest thing in the world
- overcomes the hardest thing in the world.
- That which has no substance
- enters where there is no space.
- This shows the value of non-action.
-
- Teaching without words,
- performing without actions:
- that is the Master's way.
- *
- 44
- Fame or integrity: which is more important?
- Money or happiness: which is more valuable?
- Success or failure: which is more destructive?
-
- If you look to others for fulfillment,
- you will never truly be fulfilled.
- If your happiness depends on money,
- you will never be happy with yourself.
-
- Be content with what you have;
- rejoice in the way things are.
- When you realize there is nothing lacking,
- the whole world belongs to you.
- *
- 45
- True perfection seems imperfect,
- yet it is perfectly itself.
- True fullness seems empty,
- yet it is fully present.
-
- True straightness seems crooked.
- True wisdom seems foolish.
- True art seems artless.
-
- The Master allows things to happen.
- She shapes events as they come.
- She steps out of the way
- and lets the Tao speak for itself.
- *
- 46
- When a country is in harmony with the Tao,
- the factories make trucks and tractors.
- When a country goes counter to the Tao,
- warheads are stockpiled outside the cities.
-
- There is no greater illusion than fear,
- no greater wrong than preparing to defend
- yourself,
- no greater misfortune than having an enemy.
-
- Whoever can see through all fear
- will always be safe.
- *
- 47
- Without opening your door,
- you can open your heart to the world.
- Without looking out your window,
- you can see the essence of the Tao.
-
- The more you know,
- the less you understand.
-
- The Master arrives without leaving,
- sees the light without looking,
- achieves without doing a thing.
- *
- 48
- In the pursuit of knowledge,
- every day something is added,
- In the practice of the Tao,
- every day something is dropped.
- Less and less do you need to force things,
- until finally you arrive at non-action.
- When nothing is done,
- nothing is left undone.
-
- True mastery can be gained
- by letting things go their own way.
- It can't be gained by interfering.
- *
- 49
- The Master has no mind of her own.
- She works with the mind of the people.
-
- She is good to people who are good.
- She is also good to people who aren't good.
- This is true goodness.
-
- She trusts people who are trustworthy.
- She also trusts people who aren't trustworthy.
- This is true trust.
-
- The Master's mind is like space.
- People don't understand her.
- They look to her and wait.
- She treats them like her own children.
- *
- 50
- The Master gives himself up
- to whatever the moment brings.
- He knows that he is going to die,
- and he had nothing left to hold on to:
- no illusions in his mind,
- no resistances in his body.
- He doesn't think about his actions;
- they flow from the core of his being.
- He holds nothing back from life;
- therefore he is ready for death,
- as a man is ready for sleep
- after a good day's work.
- *
- 51
- Every being in the universe
- is an expression of the Tao.
- It springs into existence,
- unconscious, perfect, free,
- takes on a physical body,
- lets circumstances complete it.
- That is why every being
- spontaneously honors the Tao.
-
- The Tao gives birth to all beings,
- nourishes them, maintains them,
- cares for them, comforts them, protects them,
- takes them back to itself,
- creating without possessing,
- acting without expecting,
- guiding without interfering.
- That is why love of the Tao
- is in the very nature of things.
- *
- 52
- In the beginning was the Tao.
- All things issue from it;
- all things return to it.
-
- To find the origin,
- trace back the manifestations.
- When you recognize the children
- and find the mother,
- you will be free of sorrow.
-
- If you close your mind in judgments
- and traffic with desires,
- your heart will be troubled.
- If you keep your mind from judging
- and aren't led by the senses,
- your heart will find peace.
-
- Seeing into darkness is clarity.
- Knowing how to yield is strength.
- Use your own light
- and return to the source of light.
- This is called practicing eternity.
- *
- 53
- The great Way is easy,
- yet people prefer the side paths.
- Be aware when things are out of balance.
- Stay centered within the Tao.
-
- When rich speculators prosper
- while farmers lose their land;
- when government officials spend money
- on weapons instead of cures;
- when the upper class is extravagant and
- irresponsible
- while the poor have nowhere to turn--
- all this is robbery and chaos.
- It is not in keeping with the Tao.
- *
- 54
- Whoever is planted in the Tao
- will not be rooted up.
- Whoever embraces the Tao
- will not slip away.
- Her name will be held in honor
- from generation to generation.
-
- Let the Tao be present in your life
- and you will become genuine.
- Let it be present in your family
- and your family will flourish.
- Let it be present in your country
- and your country will be an example
- to all countries in the world.
- Let it be present in the universe
- and the universe will sing.
-
- How do I know this is true?
- By looking inside myself.
- *
- 55
- He who is in harmony with the Tao
- is like a newborn child.
- Its bones are soft, its muscles are weak,
- but its grip is powerful.
- It doesn't know about the union
- of male and female,
- yet its penis can stand erect,
- so intense is its vital power.
- It can scream its head off all day,
- yet it never becomes hoarse,
- so complete is its harmony.
-
- The Master's power is like this.
- He lets all things come and go
- effortlessly, without desire.
- He never expects results;
- this he is never disappointed.
- He is never disappointed;
- thus his spirit never grows old.
- *
- 56
- Those who know don't talk.
- Those who talk don't know.
-
- Close your mouth,
- block off your senses,
- blunt your sharpness,
- untie your knots,
- soften your glare,
- settle your dust.
- This is the primal identity.
-
- Be like the Tao.
- It can't be approached or withdrawn from,
- benefited or harmed,
- honored or brought into disgrace.
- It gives itself up continually.
- That is why it endures.
- *
- 57
- If you want to be a great leader,
- you must learn to follow the Tao.
- Stop trying to control.
- Let go of fixed plans and concepts,
- and the world will govern itself.
-
- The more prohibitions you have,
- the less virtuous people will be.
- The more weapons you have,
- the less secure people will be.
- The more subsidies you have,
- the less self-reliant people will be.
-
- Therefore the Master says:
- I let go of the law,
- and people become honest.
- I let go of economics,
- and people become prosperous.
- I let go of religion,
- and people become serene.
- I let go of all desire for the common good,
- and the good becomes common as grass.
- *
- 58
- If a country is governed with tolerance,
- the people are comfortable and honest.
- If a country is governed with repression,
- the people are depressed and crafty.
-
- When the will to power is in charge,
- the higher the ideals, the lower the results.
- Try to make people happy,
- and you lay the groundwork for misery.
- Try to make people moral,
- and you lay the groundwork for vice.
-
- Thus the Master is content
- to serve as an example
- and not to impose her will.
- She is pointed, but doesn't pierce.
- Straightforward, but supple.
- Radiant, but easy on the eyes.
- *
- 59
- For governing a country well
- there is nothing better than moderation.
-
- The mark of a moderate man
- is freedom from his own ideas.
- Tolerant like the sky,
- all-pervading like sunlight,
- firm like a mountain,
- supple like a tree in the wind,
- he has no destination in view
- and makes use of anything
- life happens to bring his way.
-
- Nothing is impossible for him.
- Because he has let go,
- he can care for the people's welfare
- as a mother cares for her child.
- *
- 60
- Governing a large country
- is like frying a small fish.
- You spoil it with too much poking.
-
- Center your country in the Tao
- and evil will have no power.
- Not that it isn't there,
- but you'll be able to step out of its way.
-
- Give evil nothing to oppose
- and it will disappear by itself.
- *
- 61
- When a country obtains great power,
- it becomes like the sea:
- all streams run downward into it.
- The more powerful it grows,
- the greater the need for humility.
- Humility means trusting the Tao,
- thus never needing to be defensive.
-
- A great nation is like a great man:
- When he makes a mistake, he realizes it.
- Having realized it, he admits it.
- Having admitted it, he corrects it.
- He considers those who point out his faults
- as his most benevolent teachers.
- He thinks of his enemy
- as the shadow that he himself casts.
-
- If a nation is centered in the Tao,
- if it nourishes its own people
- and doesn't meddle in the affairs of others,
- it will be a light to all nations in the world.
- *
- 62
- The Tao is the center of the universe,
- the good man's treasure,
- the bad man's refuge.
-
- Honors can be bought with fine words,
- respect can be won with good deeds;
- but the Tao is beyond all value,
- and no one can achieve it.
-
- Thus, when a new leader is chosen,
- don't offer to help him
- with your wealth or your expertise.
- Offer instead
- to teach him about the Tao.
-
- Why did the ancient Masters esteem the Tao?
- Because, being one with the Tao,
- when you seek, you find;
- and when you make a mistake, you are forgiven.
- That is why everybody loves it.
- *
- 63
- Act without doing;
- work without effort.
- Think of the small as large
- and the few as many.
- Confront the difficult
- while it is still easy;
- accomplish the great task
- by a series of small acts.
-
- The Master never reaches for the great;
- thus she achieves greatness.
- When she runs into a difficulty,
- she stops and gives herself to it.
- She doesn't cling to her own comfort;
- thus problems are no problem for her.
- *
- 64
- What is rooted is easy to nourish.
- What is recent is easy to correct.
- What is brittle is easy to break.
- What is small is easy to scatter.
-
- Prevent trouble before it arises.
- Put things in order before they exist.
- The giant pine tree
- grows from a tiny sprout.
- The journey of a thousand miles
- starts from beneath your feet.
-
- Rushing into action, you fail.
- Trying to grasp things, you lose them.
- Forcing a project to completion,
- you ruin what was almost ripe.
-
- Therefore the Master takes action
- by letting things take their course.
- He remains as calm
- at the end as at the beginning.
- He has nothing,
- thus has nothing to lose.
-
- What he desires is non-desire;
- what he learns is to unlearn.
- He simply reminds people
- of who they have always been.
- He cares about nothing but the Tao.
- Thus he can care for all things.
- *
- 65
- The ancient Masters
- didn't try to educate the people,
- but kindly taught them to not-know.
-
- When they think that they know the answers,
- people are difficult to guide.
- When they know that they don't know,
- people can find their own way.
-
- If you want to learn how to govern,
- avoid being clever or rich.
- The simplest pattern is the clearest.
- Content with an ordinary life,
- you can show all people the way
- back to their own true nature.
- *
- 66
- All streams flow to the sea
- because it is lower than they are.
- Humility gives it its power.
-
- If you want to govern the people,
- you must place yourself below them.
- If you want to lead the people,
- you must learn how to follow them.
-
- The Master is above the people,
- and no one feels oppressed.
- She goes ahead of the people,
- and no one feels manipulated.
- The whole world is grateful to her.
- Because she competes with no one,
- no one can compete with her.
- *
- 67
- Some say that my teaching is nonsense.
- Others call it lofty but impractical.
- But to those who have looked inside themselves,
- this nonsense makes perfect sense.
- And to those who put it into practice,
- this loftiness has roots that go deep.
-
- I have just three things to teach:
- simplicity, patience, compassion.
- These three are your greatest treasures.
- Simple in actions and in thoughts,
- you return to the source of being.
- Patient with both friends and enemies,
- you accord with the way things are.
- Compassionate toward yourself,
- you reconcile all beings in the world.
- *
- 68
- The best athlete
- wants his opponent at his best.
- The best general
- enters the mind of his enemy.
- The best businessman
- serves the communal good.
- The best leader
- follows the will of the people.
-
- All of them embody
- the virtue of non-competition.
- Not that they don't love to compete,
- but they do it in the spirit of play.
- In this they are like children
- and in harmony with the Tao.
- *
- 69
- The generals have a saying:
- "Rather than make the first move
- it is better to wait and see.
- Rather than advance an inch
- it is better to retreat a yard."
-
- This is called
- going forward without advancing,
- pushing back without using weapons.
-
- There is no greater misfortune
- than underestimating your enemy.
- Underestimating your enemy
- means thinking that he is evil.
- Thus you destroy your three treasures
- and become an enemy yourself.
-
- When two great forces oppose each other,
- the victory will go
- to the one that knows how to yield.
- *
- 70
- My teachings are easy to understand
- and easy to put into practice.
- Yet your intellect will never grasp them,
- and if you try to practice them, you'll fail.
-
- My teachings are older than the world.
- How can you grasp their meaning?
-
- If you want to know me,
- look inside your heart.
- *
- 71
- Not-knowing is true knowledge.
- Presuming to know is a disease.
- First realize that you are sick;
- then you can move toward health.
-
- The Master is her own physician.
- She has healed herself of all knowing.
- Thus she is truly whole.
- *
- 72
- When they lose their sense of awe,
- people turn to religion.
- When they no longer trust themselves,
- they begin to depend upon authority.
-
- Therefore the Master steps back
- so that people won't be confused.
- He teaches without a teaching,
- so that people will have nothing to learn.
- *
- 73
- The Tao is always at ease.
- It overcomes without competing,
- arrives without being summoned,
- accomplishes without a plan.
-
- Its net covers the whole universe.
- And though its meshes are wide,
- it doesn't let a thing slip through.
- *
- 74
- If you realize that all things change,
- there is nothing you will try to hold on to.
- If you aren't afraid of dying,
- there is nothing you can't achieve.
-
- Trying to control the future
- is like trying to take the master carpenter's place.
- When you handle the master carpenter's tools,
- chances are that you'll cut your hand.
- *
- 75
- When taxes are too high,
- people go hungry.
- When the government is too intrusive,
- people lose their spirit.
-
- Act for the people's benefit.
- Trust them; leave them alone.
- *
- 76
- Men are born soft and supple;
- dead, they are stiff and hard.
- Plants are born tender and pliant;
- dead, they are brittle and dry.
-
- Thus whoever is stiff and inflexible
- is a disciple of death.
- Whoever is soft and yielding
- is a disciple of life.
-
- The hard and stiff will be broken.
- The soft and supple will prevail.
- *
- 77
- As it acts in the world, the Tao
- is like the bending of a bow.
- The top is bent downward;
- the bottom is bent up.
- It adjusts excess and deficiency
- so that there is perfect balance.
- It takes from what is too much
- and gives to what isn't enough.
-
- Those who try to control,
- who use force to protect their power,
- go against the direction of the Tao.
- They take from those who don't have enough
- and give to those who have far too much.
-
- The Master can keep giving
- because there is no end to her wealth.
- She acts without expectation,
- succeeds without taking credit,
- and doesn't think that she is better
- than anyone else.
- *
- 78
- Nothing in the world
- is as soft and yielding as water.
- Yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible,
- nothing can surpass it.
-
- The soft overcomes the hard;
- the gentle overcomes the rigid.
- Everyone knows this is true,
- but few can put it into practice.
-
- Therefore the Master remains
- serene in the midst of sorrow.
- Evil cannot enter his heart.
- Because he has given up helping,
- he is people's greatest help.
-
- True words seem paradoxical.
- *
- 79
- Failure is an opportunity.
- If you blame someone else,
- there is no end to the blame.
-
- Therefore the Master
- fulfills her own obligations
- and corrects her own mistakes.
- She does what she needs to do
- and demands nothing of others.
- *
- 80
- If a country is governed wisely,
- its inhabitants will be content.
- They enjoy the labor of their hands
- and don't waste time inventing
- labor-saving machines.
- Since they dearly love their homes,
- they aren't interested in travel.
- There may be a few wagons and boats,
- but they don't go anywhere.
- There may be an arsenal of weapons,
- but nobody ever uses them.
- People enjoy their food,
- take pleasure in being with their families,
- spend weekends working in their gardens,
- delight in the doings of the neighborhood.
- And even though the next country is so close
- that people can hear its roosters crowing and its
- dogs barking,
- they are content to die of old age
- without ever having gone to see it.
- *
- 81
- True words aren't eloquent;
- eloquent words aren't true.
- Wise men don't need to prove their point;
- men who need to prove their point aren't wise.
-
- The Master has no possessions.
- The more he does for others,
- the happier he is.
- The more he gives to others,
- the wealthier he is.
-
- The Tao nourishes by not forcing.
- By not dominating, the Master leads.
- *
-
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