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Tao Te Ching Verse 38: Just Being Ourselves

Tao Te Ching Verse 38: Just Being Ourselves

FromThe Tao Te Ching for Everyday Living


Tao Te Ching Verse 38: Just Being Ourselves

FromThe Tao Te Ching for Everyday Living

ratings:
Length:
31 minutes
Released:
Jun 12, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Tao Te Ching Verse 38translated by Ch'u Ta-KaoThe superior virtue is not conscious of itself as virtue; Therefore it has virtue. The inferior virtue never lets off virtue; Therefore it has no virtue.The superior virtue seems inactive, and yet there is nothing that it does not do. The inferior virtue acts and yet in the end leaves things undone.The superior benevolence acts without a motive. The superior righteousness acts with a motive. The superior ritual acts, but at first no one responds to it; Gradually people raise their arms and follow it.Therefore when Tao is lost, virtue follows. When virtue is lost, benevolence follows. When benevolence is lost, righteousness follows. When righteousness is lost, ritual follows.Ritual, therefore, is the attenuation of loyalty and faith and the outset of confusion. Fore-knowledge is the flower of Tao and the beginning of folly.Therefore the truly great man keeps to the solid and not to the tenuous; Keeps to the fruit and not to the flower. Thus he rejects the latter and takes the former.Photo by Frans Hulet on UnsplashThe Tao and AuthenticityDo you remember being a teenager?  I do.  Like any other time in my life, I have fond memories and not so fond memories of that time.  The fond memories were bonding with other people my age and discovering things about life together.  Having some deeper understanding of how the world worked and still very innocent about a great deal.  Those were tender moments.  Then, there was all the angst that came along with being an adolescent.  What would they think?  How should I be?  How should I dress?  What music should I listen to?  Who should I be? There were so many social questions, none of which I knew the answers to but desperately wanted to.  I remember being so unsure of myself and my relationships, so when people told me to just ‘be myself’ in situations, I hated that.  What did that even mean?Well, looking back, I think it meant, ‘don’t worry about how messed up you think you look.  Accept what you are, which is something you don’t know, and own it.  Be that.  Don’t try to be another person that you’re creating.  There’s no need to get ahead of your own, beautiful development.  Great advice.  I think that’s what I would tell me if I had the chance.  I’m almost certain that the teenage me wouldn’t have even heard it.  Ha.  But what could it have looked like if I had owned all that turmoil?  How much better off would I have been now had I started practicing ‘being myself’ years ago?Eh, who knows?  I think the point with the first part of this verse is to realize that it’s not just ok but also productive to just...be yourself.And how?  By being myself in the moment.  I’d like to read from Brian Walker’s Hua Hu Ching, copyrighted in 1992 and published by Harper Collins.  In the paperback edition on page 44, it says, “Why scurry about looking for the truth?It vibrates in every thing and every not-thing, right off the tip of your nose.Can you be still and see it in the mountain?  The pine tree?  Yourself?”
Released:
Jun 12, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (80)

Email the podcast: DailyTaoLife@gmail.com Welcome to the Tao Te Ching for Everyday Living. I’m your host, Dan Casas-Murray. This podcast is for the Tao Curious, those looking for a random bit of wisdom once in awhile, or for those who want to dive into this wonderful teaching.I’ve been studying the Tao Te Ching for just short of a year now, and have reconnected with a natural feeling of inner peace and contentment. I don’t hold a doctorate, nor am I qualified to teach anything about the Tao Te Ching - I’m just an ordinary person who has experienced the wonderful side effects of following the Tao. Since everyone’s experience with this wisdom is different, the only thing that I can hope for is that mine helps you to connect with the Tao in your own, unique, personal way. Feel free to listen to each episode a day at a time or any time you need a quick “Tao-shot.” You can listen while on your way to work or after that, when you’re winding down. It’s always a good time to observe the Tao.In each episode, we’ll do four things:1. We’ll read a verse of the Tao Te Ching2. Break it down into everyday language3. I’ll share my own thoughts and experience4. Apply the Verse with a couple of the many ways you can put the Tao into practice for yourself.That’s pretty much how I’ve been practicing the Tao every day - by listening to Lao Tzu, reflecting on his words of wisdom, listening to other comments, and trying to practice them in everyday life.