Entries Tagged 'Taoism' ↓

Tao Te Ching: Chapter 1






*NOTE: In the past I started this blog and planned to do 30 days studying the Tao and report on the understanding that I developed. I got 2 days in then gave up. Here is the first post of 2 and I thought I’d put it up in the hope of providing some value. I haven’t decided whether I’ll finish the series.*

The tao that can be described
is not the eternal Tao.
The name that can be spoken
is not the eternal Name.

The nameless is the boundary of Heaven and Earth.
The named is the mother of creation.

Freed from desire, you can see the hidden mystery.
By having desire, you can only see what is visibly real.

Yet mystery and reality
emerge from the same source.
This source is called darkness.

Darkness born from darkness.
The beginning of all understanding.

-Chapter 1

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The tao that can be described
is not the eternal Tao.
The name that can be spoken
is not the eternal Name.

Tao is something that you cannot put a name upon, it is the birth of everything and the formless dimension which opposes the dimension of form. Even by calling it Tao, we are limiting it. But for the sake of communicating and language, we must give it a name.  After all, all names are human creations Is a tree really a tree more than it is just a dance of vibrating molecules which move all the time, hardly any of them continuing for much time within what we would call the tree?

The nameless is the boundary of Heaven and Earth.

By giving something a name, we limit it. A “criminal” or a “table” is our minds attempts to box and understand reality but they are not those actual things. We need our minds to do this for communicating with reality.  This also links in with the first line “The Tao that can be described is not the eternal Tao”. It shows that by calling Tao by the name Tao, you are putting yourself back inside your pre conceived thoughts and feelings about it. You might think “Oh Tao, it is just one of those stupid spiritual things etc.”.

Heaven is a formless area where there are no physical things, a spiritual dimension. Earth is a physical dimension where our physical bodies live. So how is is that the nameless is the boundary of these?

Maybe the nameless is what we are. We can enter heaven, which is a formless dimension within ourselves and we appear physically on Earth also. So we could be the boundary? If heaven is an inner realm and earth is an outer realm then it follows that we are the middle part experiencing both.

The named is the mother of creation.

When you name something, it has been created as a mental concept for you. Or, this phrase could mean that “naming” is the actual process of going from formlessness to form, or if you prefer, coming into manifestation. You could interpret it as you have “created a concept which is separate from the oneness.

Freed from desire, you can see the hidden mystery.

When you are free from desire, you have stepped out of your conditioned mind patterns and can see what truly is rather than your ‘I’ centred view of the world. You can perceive the mystery unfolding that we are in. You realize that is is our reaction to situations that makes them seem good or bad, all situations are actually neutral and are made good or bad based on our desires of  wanting to take control.

By having desire, you can only see what is visibly real.

When you are desiring, you have stepped back into, and identified with your mind patterns again. A box is just a box and the mystery isnt available to you. Insanity is being identified with your mind, being indeitified with anything infact.

Yet mystery and reality
emerge from the same source.
This source is called darkness.

Darkness born from darkness.
The beginning of all understanding.

All things come from the same source, the one, infinite source. I feel like the last phrase refers to the attachment to mind and how you lose your sense of perspective.  It says that the beginning of all understanding comes from knowing of attachment to mind within yourself.

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Taoism Quotes

September 29th, 2009 — Quotes, Spirituality, Taoism, Uncategorized






The main scripture for Taoists is the 2500 year old Tao Te Ching, a beautiful text split into 81 chapters. Here are Taoism quotes from the book and which Chapters they come from, your book may have a slightly different translation. These come from the public version.

They are split into the main themes from the book:

* Non-action
* Acting in accordance with nature
* The Tao
* Principles to live by

Non-Action (aka Wu-Wei)

Therefore the Master
can act without doing anything
and teach without saying a word.
Things come her way and she does not stop them;
things leave and she lets them go

-Chapter 2

That which offers no resistance,
overcomes the hardest substances.
That which offers no resistance
can enter where there is no space.

Few in the world can comprehend
the teaching without words,
or understand the value of non-action

-Chapter 43

One who seeks knowledge learns something new every day.
One who seeks the Tao unlearns something new every day.
Less and less remains until you arrive at non-action.
When you arrive at non-action,
nothing will be left undone

-Chapter 48

Acting in accordance with nature

The supreme good is like water,
which benefits all of creation
without trying to compete with it.
It gathers in unpopular places.
Thus it is like the Tao.

Acting In Accordance With Nature

-Chapter 8

Nature uses few words:
when the gale blows, it will not last long;
when it rains hard, it lasts but a little while;
What causes these to happen? Heaven and Earth.

-Chapter 23

Water is the softest and most yielding substance.
Yet nothing is better than water,
for overcoming the hard and rigid,
because nothing can compete with it.

-Chapter 78

The Tao

The Tao is like an empty container:
it can never be emptied and can never be filled.
Infinitely deep, it is the source of all things.
It dulls the sharp, unties the knotted,
shades the lighted, and unites all of creation with dust.

-Chapter 3

The Tao of the universe
does not compete, yet wins;
does not speak, yet responds;
does not command, yet is obeyed;
and does act, but is good at directing.

-Chapter 73

The Tao of Heaven works in the world
like the drawing of a bow.
The top is bent downward;
the bottom is bent up.
The excess is taken from,
and the deficient is given to.

-Chapter 77

Principles To Live By

Alert as if surrounded on all sides by the enemy.
Courteous as a guest.
Fluid as melting ice.
Whole as an uncarved block of wood.
Receptive as a valley.
Turbid as muddied water.

-Chapter 15

Embrace simplicity.
Put others first.
Desire little.

-Chapter 19

If you want to become new,
first let yourself become old.
Those whose desires are few get them,
those whose desires are great go astray.

-Chapter 22

Who is able to give to the needy from their excess?
Only someone who is following the way of the Tao.

-Chapter 77

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