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Posts tagged "Tao Te Ching"

Learning from what is not

The very last post on the Year of Nothing series, or the yearlong process during which I became a Taoist without noticing.

Reading Wayne Dyer’s Change Your Thoughts — Change Your Life towards the end of my Year of Nothing was remarkably revelatory. Both the chain of events that led me to the book and its content helped me put in perspective what I gained during this year, and made me realize that I had become a Taoist without noticing.

Here are the most important Year-of-Nothing lessons, and the corresponding passages of the book that clarified each of them.


Contentment

Doing nothing for a whole year detoxed my system from “achievement addiction.” It developed my capacity to be content with who I already am, the serenity to appreciate all the positives that already exist in my life.

The 3rd verse of the Tao Te Ching hints at the connection between non-doing and contentment.

The sage governs by emptying minds and hearts, by weakening ambitions and strengthening bones.

Practice not doing… When action is pure and selfless, everything settles into its own perfect place

Taking a long enough break from goal-oriented action seems to have a taming effect on the ego, isolating us from its constant push to move things forward, and therefore allowing our better appreciation of the blessings of what we already are and have.

Here’s Dyer’s interpretation of this part of the 3rd verse, which he entitles “Living Contentment”:

You may have a long list of goals that you believe will provide you with contentment when they’re achieved, yet if you examine your state of happiness in this moment, you’ll notice that the fulfillment of some previous ambitions didn’t create an enduring sense of joy… “Stop pushing yourself,” Lao-tzu would say, “and feel gratitude and awe for what is. Your life is controlled by something far bigger and more significant than the petty details of your lofty aspirations.”


Humility

Doing nothing for so long somehow directed a lot of my psychic energy inwards, building my courage to take hard looks at myself. I now am clear about what made me deviate from my core values in the past. I feel more compassionate.

I am also more able to accept that many of the things we assume as “achievements” are due to factors out of our control — for instance, the huge material abundance in our lives is in large part a result of simply having been born in the Western hemisphere of the world.

In this regard, the 9th verse of the Tao Te Ching reads:

To keep on filling is not as good as stopping.

Overfilled, the cupped hands drip, better to stop pouring.

Retire when the work is done; this is the way of heaven.

Dyer interprets the central message of this verse to be “Living Humility”:

Cramming life with… activities when we’ve obviously reached a point where more is less indicates being in harmony with ego, not the Tao! Living humility knows when to just stop, let go, and enjoy the fruits of our labor. This verse clearly analogizes that the pursuit of more status, more money, more power, more approval, more stuff, is as foolish as honing a carving knife after it has reached its zenith of sharpness. Obviously, to continue would just create dullness, and it is obvious that a keen edge represents perfection.


Giving

Our happiness comes mostly from the relationships we build. We cannot really say that we “achieve” truly meaningful and fulfilling relationships, for what works best in that department is to allow our capacity for joyful giving to emerge. This is a state that by definition cannot be willed. It comes about as a spontaneous byproduct of contentment and humility, both also elusive to our conscious efforts. Try too hard, and you break the spell.

But there’s something to doing nothing for a while, either by meditating or taking a quiet walk in the park or surrendering to a Year of Nothing, that does the trick.

In this regard, the 7th verse of the Tao Te Ching reads:

…Why do heaven and earth last forever? They do not live for themselves only. This is the secret of their durability.

For this reason the sage puts himself last and so ends up ahead. He stays a witness to life, so he undures.

Serve the needs of others and all your own needs will be fulfilled. Through selfless action, fulfillment in attained.

Dyer interprets this verse as “Living Beyond Ego”:

The more you pursue desires, the more they elude you. Try letting life come to you and begin to notice the clues that what you crave is on its way… Stay appreciative of all that you receive… Stop the chase and become a withness — soothe your demanding habits by refusing to continue running after more. By letting go, you let God; and even more significantly, you become more like God and less like the ego…


Luck

Soon after I took the plunge, quitting a business and lifestyle that were clashing with my most important values, and let myself go with the flow without specific expectations, I was surprised with a very particular sense of self-confidence. Not the kind that comes from reinforcing the ego, but from faith — a conviction that whatever was going to happen, I would be just fine. I felt happy to live with the worst case scenario if I ever needed to, in order to stay true to myself and do the right thing.

Gradually, all sort of synchronicities started to happen, as if by meaningful coincidences the right people, information, opportunities and resources stumbled into me at the right time and place. I started feeling incredibly “lucky.” And yet, I sensed that somehow this luck was the result of my having become less fearful towards the fuzziness of life’s adventure.

The 55th verse of the Tao Te Ching states that

He who is in harmony with the Tao is like a newborn child. Deadly insects will not sting him. Wild beasts will not attack him. Birds of pray will not strike him. Bones are weak, muscles are soft, yet his grasp is firm.

In his interpretation of this verse, entitled “Living by Letting Go,” Dyer elaborates:

Verse 55 of the Tao Te Ching incites you to realize that what you call luck isn’t something that randomly happens–it’s yours for life when you decide to live by letting go… letting go for protection sounds paradoxical… But try seeing it as a way of allowing life’s natural rhythm to flow unimpeded through you. Living by letting go means releasing worry, stress and fear. When you promote your sense of well-being in the face of what appears as danger to others, your alignment with your Source frees you from pushing yourself to act in a forceful manner. La-tzu reminds you here that “things that are forced grow for a while, but then wither away.”

Living by letting go will allow you to appreciate Lin Yutang’s wry observation in The Importance of Living: “If you can spend a perfectly useless afternoon in a perfectly useless manner, you have learned how to live.”

The notion of luck postulated in this verse of the Tao Te Ching resonates much stronger with me than the Law of Attraction and similar concepts preached by all sorts of personal development gurus these days. There’s no way that “the universe will conspire to get us what we want” until we loose our attachment to whatever it is that we want so badly, are content with what we already have and who we are, and have faith that as long as we let go and let our actions be guided by a sense of higher purpose, we will be OK with whatever life puts us through.


Action

During the last 2-3 months of my Year of Nothing, my desire for pursuing goals again started growing fast. But I noticed important changes in the way I approach the concept of action. Paradoxically, there is something to non-doing and trusting your “luck” that also brings clarity as to how simple (yet not easy) it is to voluntarily bring about change in the world through action. It’s as if I can see the chain of causality from action to results much more clearly. That fresh clarity gave me a huge motivational boost.

This goes as well for the negative consequence of our actions in the world — I can confidently say that today I am much more conscious of the environmental impact of my lifestyle, and of the unintended consequences for others that my actions might have.

Also of crucial importance has been a strong intuition on the value of following the path of less resistance in life. As it happens to be, I also discovered that traditional Chinese thinkers regarded this principle as the key to enlightenment, the concept of “effortless action” or wu-wei being an analogue to the Buddhist notion of Nirvana.

This is very much in line with modern notions of personal development and business thought that advocate a motivational focus on personal strengths, passions and meaning instead of profit and other external forms of reward. Action that is in line with our talents or level of skill, is exciting, and/or meaningful cannot be said to involve effort in the sense of struggle, tedium or moral torment.

Doing nothing and wu-wei are so interlinked in the traditional Chinese psyche that both are sometimes identified and referred to as “non-action.”

The Tao Te Ching’s 43rd verse is particularly straightforward on this subject:

The softest of all things overrides the hardest of all thigns. That without substance enters where there is no space. Hence I know the value of non-action.

Teaching without words, performing without actions–few in the world can grasp it–that is the master’s way…

And Dyer’s commentary:

[The principle of non-action] is clearly seen when you look at great champions as they perform their chosen activities. The greatest golfers are effortless in their swing… they don’t use force, nor can they find words to describe how they do it. The most talented artists dance softly, without effort; paint quietly, without force; and write easily, without struggle, by allowing the words to come to them.


…Some marathon runners say that they’ve learned to relax and stop pushing, letting their legs, arms and torso simply be as their bodies begin experiencing extreme exhaustion with only only a few miles to go. They report that when they shut down the mental interference and instructions they magically cross that finish line.


Apply this way of seeing everything in your world: Tasks will be simplified, your performance level will increase, and the pressure to be better than others by using superior hardened strength will cease to be a factor.

As a result of my Year of Nothing, I have also gained a much tighter control over my urges to be active for its own sakes, which more often than not is simply a modern form of procrastination.

In a nutshell, having spent such a long period of time in non-action, paradoxically gave me a much better sense of the value of action.


Patience

Equally important in the Taoist notion of wu-wei is the concept of timing. In order for action to be effortless, we must learn to act only when the time is right. Doing nothing for such long time allowed me to appreciate the value of dwelling in non-action for as long as it is needed, until the right time to act arrives.



Living from the void

Last but not least, doing nothing for a whole year somehow infused me with a sense of spirituality, with the notion that there is a creative, overarching consciousness “out there” that nurtures every single thing in the universe. I can’t help but wonder about the possibility of synchronicity and “luck” as discussed above being mechanisms by which this higher consciousness communicates with us.

With hindsight, I think I now have a better idea of how this process of “illumination through non-action” might occur. In the Taoist view, “emptying” the mind of thoughts and desires through meditation and other techniques, takes us from doing nothing to being nothing — and nothingness is at the core of the “nameless,” “formless” source of everything that they called the Tao.

That’s why meditation is viewed by Taoists as a means to “harmonize people with nature:” making us more spontaneous, allowing us to discover our true vocations, more respectful of other life forms by becoming empathetic, compassionate and less judgmental, etc.

But above and beyond all these positive effects, there is a deeper experience of transcendence, a sort of heightened awareness about the Tao as that higher form of consciousness that is so appealing to me nowadays. A deeper inner conviction that in ancient Chinese thought was the spiritual anchor that allows one to “live by letting go” as discussed above.

That is the principle embodied in the 11th verse of the Tao Te Ching:

Thirty spokes converge upon a single hub; it is on the hole in the center that the use of the cart hinges.


Shape clay into a vessel; it is the space within that makes it useful. Carve fine doors and windows, but the room is useful in its emptiness.


The usefulness of what is depends on what is not.

These are Dyer’s words on the meaning of this verse, which he interprets as “Living from the void”:

A composer once told me that the silence from which each note emerges is more important than the note itslef. He said that that it’s the empty space between the notes that literally allows the music to be music — if there’s no void, there’s only continuous sound. You can apply this subtle awareness to everything that you experience in your daily life. Ask yourself what makes a tree, a tree. The bark? The branches? The roots? The leaves? All of these things are what is. And all of them do not constitute a tree. What’s needed to have a tree is what is not — an imperceptible, invisible life force that eludes your five senses. You can cut and carve and search the cells of a tree endlessly and you’ll never capture it.

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When synchronicity works better than Google (or The Year of Nothing, Part 4)

The most important lessons I learned during this Year of Nothing came through chains of haphazard, apparently disconnected events and circumstances.


“It is wrong, then, to chide the novel for being fascinated by mysterious coincidences… but it is right to chide man for being blind to such coincidences in his daily life. For he thereby deprives his life of a dimension of beauty.”
Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being


In his book Change Your Thoughts — Change Your Life, Wayne Dyer gives a personal interpretation of the 81 verses of the Tao Te Ching.

“Living from the Void” is the title of the chapter in which he interprets the eleventh verse, and inspired me to write this post.

But as I started writing, I realized I had to write two posts.

In this one, I’ll give you some background on how I stumbled into the book, and the uncanny “relationship” I developed with it and the Tao Te Ching itself.

In the next post, which will be the last one of my Year of Nothing series, I’ll talk about the content of the eleventh chapter of the book.


Hater of all things new age

I used to identify with that phrase until not too long ago. I would have never bought Dyer’s book back then.

But then, six months ago I was in New York, half way through my Year of Nothing.

One afternoon I visited Steve Pavlina’s blog to find that he had just published a post entitled The Afternoon of Life, inspired in a new DVD by Wayne Dyer, of the same title.

The post didn’t go into much detail about what the DVD was all about, but Steve’s post hit home for two reasons.

First, during my early teens I read Your Erroneous Zones, Dyer’s self-help classic, and it had a big impact on me, specially a chapter entitled “You Don’t Need their Approval,” on how one should live life without seeking the approval of others.

It was the very first self-help book I read. I got it from my father, who read it despite being the most anti-self-help person I know.

I never read any other book by Dyer after that, in part because his later titles drifted from the commonsensical pragmatism of Your Erroneous Zones towards subjects that seemed to be too newagey for me.

Second, Steve’s post emphasizes the role of synchronicity as a guiding principle in life:

Interesting synchronicities… happen all the time when I stay in the flow of being happy and doing what I can to help people. But when I get too caught up in personal ambition and lose sight of meaning, fulfillment, and purpose, the synchronicities go away. I can tell when I’m back on track because the synchronicities immediately start flowing again. It’s magical how that happens.

Dyer’s movie ended up having a life-changing impact on me. But I didn’t buy it right after reading Steve’s post. I was still too skeptical about “spiritual stuff”.


A year of synchronicity

I have always been curious about the concept of synchronicity. In a way, my incipient faith in it inspired me to go for my Year of Nothing — the experiment was all about going with the flow and allowing myself to be surprised by whatever I discovered along the way. After reading Steve’s post, I started thinking more often about it and opening up to the possibility of experiencing it.

And as Steve says, it really worked like magic. The very best things that happened to me during this year were the result of a series of meaningful coincidences.

Among the most important ones was meeting Master C.K. Chu in New York, with whom I started studying Tai Chi Chuan, Nei Kung, and Taoist meditation.

Three years before, and completely by chance, I met Jim Borrelli, one of the very few people in the world certified by Chu as a Nei Kung instructor, while taking a short break with my brother in Los Angeles. I wasn’t even thinking of basing myself in New York at the moment.

The only reference I had of Taoism until then was a Spanish translation of the Tao Te Ching I bought eight years ago while living in Barcelona, which I left behind with my best friend and roommate when I moved to Dubai.

Despite my skepticism, I couldn’t help feeling attracted to the book when I saw it. There was something about its ancient, majestic flair that poked my curiosity. So I bought it, skimmed through its pages a couple of times, and left it to accumulate dust in my library.

When I met Jim and started reading about Nei Kung on his web page, I had a flashback of the curiosity I felt for the Tao Te Ching in Barcelona and decided to give it a try.

I got hooked since my very first lesson. I had never felt so good after any other form of physical activity in my life.

During one of my classes with Jim, the subject came up that my next stop after LA was Caracas, Venezuela, where I was going to visit my family. Jim told me that from all the places in the world, there was another Chu-certified instructor in Caracas: Eka Markez, with whom I study to this day every time I go back home for a holiday.

So as soon as I was back in New York, it was natural for me to go look for Master Chu.


Re-encountering the Tao Te Ching

After a couple of weeks in New York, I flew to Buenos Aires to meet up with my best friend, who was coming from Barcelona to visit his Argentine family. I asked him to bring me the copy of the Tao Te Ching. I just felt curious about giving the book a fresh try now that I was practicing Tai Chi Chuan and Nei Kung.

When I got the book and opened it up, I found that that particular Spanish translation of German scholar Richard Wilhelm’s 1923 version, opens with the poem “For a Version of I Ching”, by none other than Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges.

I either hadn’t noticed the poem when I bought the book, or had completely forgotten about it. The fact is that getting the book back in Buenos Aires after so many years and suddenly finding Borges in it, felt like an irrefutable sign that I was on to something.

But that initial surprise was nothing compared to the shocking revelation I was about to go through. A couple of pages after the poem by Borges, I found that the book’s prologue had been written by Carl Jung, who was a close friend of Wilhelm’s. It is an essay on the concept of synchronicity. Jung thought of it as essential for understanding the Chinese worldview, and the Tao Te Ching.

The essay stands today on its own as a classic on the subject. A full explanation of synchronicity had arrived to me by the workings of synchronicity itself!


Back to New York, and to Wayne Dyer

A couple of weeks later, I was back in New York in the middle of August’s heat. One afternoon, I’m walking down 5th Ave with another of my very best friends and ex business partner in Dubai. We walk into East West Cafe, which is inside a huge spirituality, holistic health and esoteric philosophy bookstore.

As we walked towards the coffee shop in the second floor, my friend strays and starts browsing the books. I didn’t feel like browsing myself much. Despite my gradual opening towards the concept of synchronicity and the Tao Te Ching, the bookstore still seemed too airy fairy for me. So I kind of stood still there in the middle of the room.

All of a sudden my friend calls me from the opposite side of the aisle. She wanted to show me something. When I got close enough to her, I almost choke out of an attack of hysterical laughter.

She was holding in her hand a DVD by Wayne Dyer entitled “The Shift”, asking me if I knew anything about it. It was the movie that I read about in Steve Pavlina’s blog a few weeks before, but the title had been changed!

I told my friend about my reading of Steve’s post on the movie and my initial reticence towards it. She had absolutely no clue about that, no previous reference of the movie whatsoever. But she picked it out from the thousands of products that could have caught her attention. We quickly agreed we had to by it.


The Shift

Watching The Shift was, again, a revelatory experience. The movie opens with a scene where Wayne Dyer is writing on a desk. The camera zooms right away on a book besides him written by, Abracadabra, Carl Jung. The phrase “the afternoon of life” is his.

The central theme of the movie is the sudden shift from a life based on ambition to one based on meaning and higher purpose that many people go through.

I felt identified all the way: I was going exactly through that process. The movie also made me understand Dyer’s shift, and how it reflected back into his writing. How and why he went from the pragmatism of Your Erroneous Zones to the spirituality of his later books.

The movie alludes many times to Lao Tzu, legendary author of the Tao Te Ching, as one of Dyer’s spiritual masters.

But it wasn’t until a couple of days ago that I stumbled into Change Your Thoughts — Change Your Life. As you might have come to expect by now, again, this was due to total coincidence, while doing a search for books on Amazon.com on a completely unrelated subject.

And to top it all off, the process of writing this post was itself a good case of how synchronicity keeps knocking at my door.


Telling the Resistor to suck it

Synchronicity is seen by many as an esoteric subject, so at first I felt queasy about people thinking I was crazy after reading it. It was my good-old-anti-new-age reflex kicking in. Almost everyone I discuss synchronicity with reacts positively, or at least with an open mind about it, leading to interesting philosophical discussions. But writing a blog post on the subject, somehow, felt different.

As I pondered these issues in a bout of indecision that was about to make me file the first draft in the “Writings You Better Keep To Yourself” folder, I got this blog post by Communicatrix in my inbox which, surprise surprise, opens with a paragraph on a clear-cut synchronicity that inspired her to write it.

And it’s also about a self-help book, Way of the Peaceful Warrior, which was deeply revelatory to her. The way she describes the book almost fits perfectly with the way I feel towards Dyer’s book, or for that matter, any book, movie or information resource that enters into mystical territory a bit farther than I’m perfectly comfortable with:

[Way of the Peaceful Warrior] is a a parable of awakening that’s derived from real life… containing mystical elements that may or may not be true. As with the consumption of most myths and parables, that sort of stuff is beside the point: what matters is what the stories in the book do to you as you take them in. Are you intrigued? Do you feel questions bubbling up? Recognition, self- or otherwise? Do you feel tumblers falling into place or a coating of dust being blown away? Do you want to climb in and disappear, or pull the characters out and ask them questions?

…if it is the right book for you, it will ring a bell that cannot be unrung: that reminder that yes, there’s something else and yes, one foot after the other—given some purpose, luck and assistance—will get you there…

After reading Communicatrix’s blog post, I logged into Twitter. I wanted to see if I could find a final bit of anti-writers-block encouragement. And because synchronicity has its ways of working better than Google to find the right information at the right time, I came across this made-in-heaven-for-Alan tweet by Communicatrix herself:

“Before dismissing something as newage-rhymes-with-sewage”, check for the baby in that filthy bathwater.

That was it. My resistance was gone. Or, again, as Communicatrix said it in that very same blog post, “I told the Resistor to suck it, because I knew what I had to write about.”

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