
The Tao Te Ching Of Lao-Tzu With Music
by Silas Day
In this premium track Silas Day reads to you the entire Wayne Dyer translation of the seminal and world renown text The "Tao Te Ching" which has not only influenced people in our own time but been a constant source of spiritual inspiration and wonder for the past 2,000 years. The Music is provided freely by Scott Buckley, song name Cirrus.
Transcript
The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao.
The name that can be named is not the eternal name.
The Tao is both named and nameless.
As nameless,
It is the origin of all things.
As named,
It is the mother of ten thousand things.
Ever desireless,
One can see the mystery.
Ever desiring,
One sees only the manifestations.
And the mystery itself is the doorway to all understanding.
Under heaven,
All can see beauty as beauty,
Only because there is ugliness.
All can know good as good,
Only because there is evil.
Being and non-being produce each other.
The difficult is born in the easy.
Long is defined by short,
The high by the low.
Before and after go along with each other.
So the sage lives openly with apparent duality and paradoxical unity.
The sage can act without efforts and teach without words,
Nurturing things without possessing them.
He works,
But not for rewards.
He competes,
But not for results.
When the work is done,
It is forgotten.
This is why it lasts forever.
Putting a value on status will create contentiousness.
If you overvalue possessions,
People begin to steal.
By not displaying what is desirable,
You will cause the people's hearts to remain undisturbed.
The sage governs by emptying minds and hearts,
By weakening ambitions and strengthening bones.
When action is pure and selfless,
Everything settles into its own perfect place.
The Tao is empty,
But inexhaustible.
Bottomless,
The ancestor of it all.
Within it,
The sharp edges become smooth.
The twisted knots loosen.
The sun is softened by a cloud.
The dust settles into place.
It is hidden,
But always present.
I do not know who gave birth to it.
It seems to be the common ancestor of all,
The father of all things.
Heaven and earth are impartial.
They see the ten thousand things as straw dogs.
The sage is not sentimental.
He treats all his people as straw dogs.
The sage is like heaven and earth.
To him,
None are especially dear,
Nor is there anyone he disfavors.
He gives and gives without condition,
Offering his treasures to everyone.
Between heaven and earth is a space like a bellows,
Empty and inexhaustible.
The more it is used,
The more it produces.
Hold on to the center.
Man was made to sit quietly and find the truth within.
The spirit that never dies is called the mysterious feminine.
Although she becomes the whole universe,
Her immaculate purity is never lost.
Although she assumes countless forms,
Her true identity remains intact.
The gateway to the mysterious female is called the root of creation.
Listen to her voice.
Hear it echo through creation.
Without fail,
She will reveal her presence.
Without fail,
She brings us to our own perfection.
Although it is invisible,
It endures.
It will never end.
Heaven is eternal.
The earth endures.
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 endures.
Serve the needs of others and all your own needs will be fulfilled.
Through selfless action,
Fulfillment is attained.
The supreme good is like water,
Which nourishes all things without trying to.
It flows to low places loathed by all men.
Therefore it is like the Tao.
Live in accordance with the nature of things.
In dwelling,
Be close to the land.
In meditation,
Go deep in the heart.
In dealing with others,
Be gentle and kind.
Stand by your word.
Govern with equity.
Be timely in choosing the right moment.
One who lives in accordance with nature does not go against the way of things.
He moves in harmony with the present moment,
Always knowing the truth of just what to do.
To keep filling is not as good as stopping.
Overfilled,
The cupped hands drip.
It is better to stop pouring.
Sharpen a blade too much and its edge will soon be lost.
Fill your house with jade and gold and it brings insecurity.
Puff yourself with honor and pride,
And no one can save you from a fall.
Retire when the work is done.
This is the way of heaven.
Carrying body and soul and embracing the one,
Can you avoid separation?
Can you let your body become as supple as a newborn child's?
In the opening and shutting of the divine gate,
Can you play the feminine part?
Can you love your people and govern your domain without self-importance?
Giving birth and nourishing,
Having yet not possessing,
Working yet not taking credit,
Leading without controlling or dominating.
One who heeds this power brings the Tao to this very earth.
This is the primal virtue.
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,
And 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.
The five colors blind the eye.
The five tones deafen the ear.
The five flavors dull the taste.
The chase and the hunt craze people's minds.
Wasting energy to obtain rare objects only impedes one's growth.
The master observes the world,
But trusts his inner vision.
He allows things to come and go.
He prefers what is within to what is without.
Favor and grace seem alarming.
High status greatly afflicts your person.
Why are favor and disgrace alarming?
Seeking favor is degrading.
Alarming when it is gotten.
Alarming when it is lost.
Why does high status greatly affect your person?
The reason we have a lot of trouble is that we have selves.
If we had no selves,
What trouble would we have?
Man's true nature,
Man's true self,
Is eternal.
Yet he thinks,
I am this body and I will soon die.
If we have no body,
What calamities can we have?
One who sees himself as everything is fit to be the guardian of the world.
One who loves himself as everyone is fit to be teacher of the world.
That which cannot be seen is called invisible.
That which cannot be heard is called inaudible.
That which cannot be held is called intangible.
These three things cannot be defined,
Therefore they are merged as one.
Each of these three is subtle for description.
By intuition you can see it,
Hear it,
And feel it.
Then the unseen,
Unheard,
And untouched are present as one.
Its rising brings no dawn.
Its setting no darkness.
It goes on and on,
Unnameable,
Returning into nothingness.
Approach it and there is no beginning.
Follow it and there is no end.
You cannot know it,
But you can be it,
At ease in your own life.
Discovering how things have always been brings one into harmony with the way.
The ancient masters were profound and subtle.
Their wisdom was unfathomable.
There is no way to describe it.
One can only describe them vaguely by their appearance.
Watchful,
Like men crossing a winter stream.
Alert,
Like men aware of danger.
Simple as uncarved wood.
Hollow,
Like caves.
Yielding,
Like ice about to melt.
Amorphous,
Like muddy water.
But in the muddiest,
Water clears.
And as it is stilled,
And out of that stillness,
Life arises.
He who keeps the Tao does not want to be full.
But precisely because he is never full,
He can remain like a hidden sprout,
And does not rush to early ripening.
Become totally empty.
Let your heart be at peace.
Amidst the rush of worldly comings and goings,
Observe how endings become beginnings.
Things flourish,
Each by each.
Only return to the source,
To what is,
And what is to be.
To return to the root is to find peace.
To find peace is to fulfill one's destiny.
To fulfill one's destiny is to be constant.
To know the constant is called insight.
Not knowing this cycle leads to disaster.
Knowing the constant gives perspective.
This perspective is impartial.
Impartiality is the highest nobility.
The highest nobility is divine.
Being divine,
You will be at one with the Tao.
Being at one with the Tao is eternal.
This way is everlasting,
Not endangered by physical death.
With the greatest leader above them,
People barely know one exists.
Next comes one whom they love and praise.
Next comes one whom they fear.
Next comes one whom they despise and defy.
When a leader trusts no one,
No one trusts him.
The great leader speaks little.
He never speaks carelessly.
He never works without self-interest and leaves no trace.
When all is finished,
The people say,
We did it ourselves.
When the greatness of the Tao is present,
Action arises from one's own heart.
When the greatness of the Tao is absent,
Action comes from the rules of kindness and justice.
If you need rules to be just and kind,
If you act virtuously,
This is a sure sign that virtue is absent.
Thus we see the great hypocrisy.
When kinship falls into discord,
Piety and rites of devotion arise.
When the country falls into chaos,
Official loyalists will appear and patriotism is born.
Give up sainthood.
Renounce wisdom and it will be a hundred times better for everyone.
Throw away morality and justice and people will do the right thing.
Throw away industry and profit and there will be no thieves.
All of these are outward forms alone.
They are not sufficient in themselves.
It is more important to see the simplicity,
To realize one's true nature,
To cast off selfishness and temper desire.
Give up learning and you will be free from all your cares.
What is the difference between yes and no?
What is the difference between good and evil?
Must I fear what others fear?
Should I fear desolation when there is abundance?
Should I fear darkness when that light is shining everywhere?
In spring some go to the park and climb the terraces,
But I alone am drifting,
Not knowing where I am.
Like a newborn babe before it learns to smile,
I am alone without a place to go.
Most people have too much.
I alone seem to be missing something.
Mine is indeed the mind of an ignoramus in its unadulterated simplicity.
I am but a guest in this world.
While others rush about to get things done,
I accept what is offered.
I alone seem foolish,
Earning little,
Spending less.
Other people strive for fame.
I avoid the limelight,
Preferring to be left alone.
Indeed,
I seem like an idiot.
No mind,
No worries.
I drift like a wave on the ocean.
I blow as aimless as the wind.
All men settle down in their grooves.
I alone am stubborn and remain outside.
But wherein I am most different from others is in knowing to take sustenance from the Great Mother.
The greatest virtue is to follow the Tao and the Tao alone.
The Tao is elusive and intangible.
Although formless and intangible,
It gives rise to form.
Although vague and elusive,
It gives rise to shapes.
Although dark and obscure,
It is the spirit,
The essence,
The life-breath of all things.
Throughout the ages,
Its name has been preserved in order to recall the beginning of all things.
How do I know the ways of all things at the beginning?
I look inside myself and see what is within me.
The flexible are preserved unbroken.
The bent become straight.
The empty are filled.
The exhausted become renewed.
The poor are enriched.
The rich are filled.
The rich are confounded.
Therefore the sage embraces the One.
Because he does not 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.
The old saying that the flexible are preserved unbroken is surely right.
If you have truly attained wholeness,
Everything will flock to you.
To talk little is natural.
Fierce winds do not blow all morning.
A downpour of rain does not last the day.
Who does this?
Heaven and earth.
But these are exaggerated,
Forced effects.
And that is why they cannot be sustained.
If heaven and earth cannot sustain a forced action,
How much less is man able to do?
Those who follow the way become one with the way.
Those who follow goodness become one with goodness.
Those who stray from the way and goodness become one with failure.
If you conform to the way,
Its power flows through you.
Your actions become those of nature.
Your ways those of heaven.
Open yourself to the Tao and trust your natural responses.
Then everything will fall into place.
If you stand tiptoe,
You cannot stand firmly.
If you take long steps,
You cannot walk far.
Showing off does not reveal enlightenment.
Boasting will not produce accomplishment.
He who is self-righteous is not respected.
He who brags will not endure.
All these ways of acting are odious,
Distasteful.
They are superfluous excess.
They are like a pain in the stomach,
A tumor in the body.
When walking the path of the Tao,
This is the very stuff that must be uprooted,
Thrown out,
And left behind.
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 Tao.
I call it great.
Great is boundless.
Boundless is eternally flowing.
Ever flowing,
It is constantly returning.
Therefore,
The way is great.
Heaven is great.
Earth is great.
People are great.
Thus,
To know humanity,
Understand earth.
To know earth,
Understand heaven.
To know heaven,
Understand the way.
To know the way,
Understand the great within yourself.
The heavy is the root of the light.
The still is the master of unrest.
Realizing this,
The successful person is poised and centered in the midst of all activities.
Although surrounded by opulence,
He is not swayed.
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.
To be restless is to lose one's self-mastery.
A knower of truth travels without leaving a trace,
Speaks without causing harm,
Gives without keeping an account.
The door he shuts,
Though having no lock,
Cannot be opened.
The knot he ties,
Though using no cord,
Cannot be undone.
Be wise and help all beings impartially.
Abandon none.
Waste no opportunities.
This is called following 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 the teacher is not respected and the student not cared for,
Confusion will arise,
However clever one is.
This is the great secret.
Know the strength of man,
But keep a woman's care.
Be a valley under heaven.
If you do,
The constant virtue will not fade away.
One will become like a child again.
Know the white,
Keep to the black,
And be the pattern of the world.
To be the pattern of the world is to move constantly in the path of virtue without erring a single step,
And return again to the infinite.
One who understands splendor while holding to humility acts in accord with eternal power.
To be the fountain of the world is to live the life of abundant virtue.
When the unformed is formed into objects,
Its original qualities are lost.
If you preserve your original qualities,
You can govern anything.
Truly,
The best governor governs least.
Do you think you can take over the universe and improve it?
I do not believe it can be done.
Everything under heaven is a sacred vessel and cannot be controlled.
Trying to control leads to ruin.
Trying to grasp,
We lose.
Allow your life to unfold naturally.
Know that it too is a vessel of perfection.
Just as you breathe in and breathe out,
There is a time for being ahead and a time for being behind,
A time for being in motion and a time for being at rest,
A time for being vigorous and a time for being exhausted,
A time for being safe and a time for being in danger.
To the sage,
All of life is a movement towards perfection.
So what need has he for the excessive,
The extravagant or the extreme?
One who would guide a leader of men in the uses of life will warn him against the use of arms for conquest.
Weapons often turn upon the wielder.
Where armies settle,
Nature offers nothing but briars and thorns.
After a great battle has been fought,
The land is cursed,
The crops fail,
The earth lies stripped of its motherhood.
After you have attained your purpose,
You must not parade your success.
You must not boast of your ability.
You must not feel proud.
You must rather regret that you had not been able to prevent the war.
You must never think of conquering others by force.
Whatever strains with force will soon decay.
It is not attuned to the way.
Not being attuned to the way,
Its end comes all too soon.
Weapons are tools of violence.
All decent men detest them.
Therefore,
Followers of the Tao never use them.
Arms serve evil.
They are the tools of those who oppose the wise.
Use them only as a last resort.
For peace and quiet are dearest to the decent man's heart.
And to him,
Even a victory is no cause for rejoicing.
He who thinks triumph beautiful is one with a will to kill.
And one with a will to kill shall never prevail upon the world.
It is a good sign when a man's higher virtue and nature comes forward.
It is a bad sign when his lower nature comes forward.
With the results of conflict,
We have grief and sorrow.
Every victory a funeral.
When you win a conflict,
You celebrate by mourning.
The eternal Tao has no name.
Although simple and subtle,
No one in the world can master it.
If kings and lords could harness them,
The ten thousand things would naturally obey.
Heaven and earth would rejoice with the dripping of sweet dew.
With the dripping of sweet dew,
Everyone would live in harmony.
Not by official decree,
But by their own goodness.
Once the whole is divided,
The parts need names.
There are already enough names.
No when to stop.
No when reason sets limits to avoid peril.
Rivers and streams are born of the ocean,
And all creation is born of the Tao.
Just as all waters flow back to become the ocean,
All creation flows back to become the Tao.
One who understands others has knowledge.
One who understands himself has wisdom.
Mastering others requires force.
Mastering yourself needs strength.
If you realize you have enough,
You are truly rich.
One who gives himself to this position surely lives long.
One who gives himself to Tao surely lives forever.
The great way is universal.
It can apply to the left or the right.
All beings depend on it for life.
Even so,
It does not take possession of them.
It accomplishes its purpose,
But makes no claim for itself.
It covers all creatures like the sky,
But does not dominate them.
All things return to it as their home,
But it does not lord it over them.
Thus,
It may be called great.
The sage imitates this conduct.
By not claiming greatness,
The sage achieves greatness.
All men will come to him who keeps to the One.
They flock to him and receive no harm,
For in him they find peace,
Security,
And happiness.
Music and dining are passing pleasures,
Yet they cause people to stop.
How bland and insipid are the things of this world when one compares them to the Tao.
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 cannot be exhausted.
Should you want to contain something,
You must deliberately let it expand.
Should you want to weaken something,
You should deliberately let it grow strong.
Should you want to eliminate something,
You should deliberately allow it to flourish.
Should you want to take something away,
You must deliberately grant it access.
The lesson here is called the wisdom of obscurity.
The gentle outlasts the strong.
The obscure outlasts the obvious.
Fish cannot leave deep waters,
And a country's weapons should not be displayed.
For the Tao does nothing,
But leaves nothing undone.
If powerful people could center themselves in it,
The whole world would be transformed by itself and its natural rhythms.
When life is simple,
Pretenses fall away.
Our essential nature shines through.
Without wanting,
There is calm,
And the world will straighten itself.
When there is silence,
One finds the anchor of the universe within oneself.
A truly good man is not aware of his goodness,
And is therefore good.
A foolish man tries to be good,
And is therefore not good.
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 highest virtue is to act without a sense of self.
The highest kindness is to give without condition.
The highest justice is to see without preference.
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.
The great master follows his own nature,
And not the trappings of life.
It is said,
He stays with the fruit,
And not the fluff.
He stays with the firm,
And not the flimsy.
He stays true,
And not false.
These things from ancient times arise from one.
The sky is whole and clear.
The earth is whole and firm.
The spirit is whole and full.
The ten thousand things are whole,
And the country is upright.
All these are virtue of wholeness.
When man interferes with the Tao,
The sky becomes filthy.
The earth becomes depleted.
The equilibrium crumbles.
Creatures become extinct.
Therefore,
Nobility is rooted in humility.
Loftiness is based on lowliness.
This is why noble people refer to themselves as alone,
Lacking,
And unworthy.
The pieces of a chariot are useless unless they work in accordance with the whole.
A man's life brings nothing unless he lives in accordance with the whole universe.
Playing one's part in accordance with the universe is true humility.
Truly,
Too much honor means no honor.
It is not wise to shine like jade,
And resound like stone chimes.
Returning is the motion of the Tao.
Yielding is the way of the Tao.
The ten thousand things are born of being,
And being is born of non-being.
A great scholar hears of the Tao and begins to practice diligently.
A middling scholar hears of the Tao and retains some and loses some.
An inferior scholar hears of the Tao and roars with ridicule.
Without that laugh,
It would not be the Tao.
So there are constructive sayings on this.
The way of illumination seems dark.
Going forward at times seems like retreat.
The easy way may seem hard.
True power may come off as weak.
True purity may appear tarnished.
True clarity seems obscure.
The greatest of arts may seem unsophisticated.
The greatest love may seem indifferent.
The greatest wisdom may seem childish.
The Tao is hidden and nameless.
The Tao alone nourishes and brings everything to fulfillment.
The Tao gave birth to one.
One gave birth to two.
Two gave birth to three.
And three beget the ten thousand things.
The ten thousand things carry yin and embrace yang.
They achieve harmony by combining these forces.
People suffer at the thought of being without parents,
Without food,
Or without worth.
Yet,
This is the very way that kings and lords once described themselves.
For one gains by losing and loses by gaining.
What others taught,
I teach.
The violent do not die a natural death.
That is my fundamental teaching.
The softest of all things overrides the hardest of all things.
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.
Rare indeed are those who obtain the bounty of this world.
Which means more to you?
You or your renown?
Which brings more to you?
You or what you own?
I say what you gain is often more trouble than what you lose.
Love is the fruit of sacrifice.
Wealth is the fruit of generosity.
A contented man is never disappointed.
He who knows when to stop is preserved from peril.
Only thus can you endure long.
The greatest imperfection seems imperfect.
And yet,
Its use is inexhaustible.
The greatest fullness seems empty.
And yet,
Its use is endless.
Great straightness seems twisted.
Great intelligence seems stupid.
Great eloquence seems awkward.
Great truth seems false.
And great discussion seems silent.
Activity conquers cold.
Inactivity conquers heat.
Stillness and tranquility set things in order in the universe.
When the world has the way,
Running horses are retired to till the fields.
When the world lacks the way,
War horses are bred in the countryside.
There is no greater loss than losing the dhow.
No greater loss than losing the dhow.
No greater curse than covetousness.
No greater tragedy than discontentment.
The worst of faults is wanting more always.
Contentment alone is enough.
Indeed,
The bliss of eternity can be found in your contentment.
Without going out the door,
Know the world.
Without looking out the window,
You may see the ways of heaven.
The farther one goes,
The less one knows.
Therefore,
The sage does not venture forth,
And yet knows,
Does not look,
And yet names,
Does not strive,
And yet attains completion.
Learning consists of daily accumulating.
The practice of the dhow consists of daily diminishing,
Decreasing and decreasing until doing nothing.
When nothing is done,
Nothing is left undone.
True mastery can be gained by letting things go their own way.
It cannot be gained by interfering.
The sage has no fixed mind.
He is aware of the needs of others.
Those who are good,
He treats with goodness.
Those who are bad,
He also treats with goodness,
Because the nature of his being is good.
He is kind to the kind.
He is also kind to the unkind,
Because the nature of his being is kindness.
He is faithful to the faithful.
He is also faithful to the unfaithful.
The sage lives in harmony with all below heaven.
He sees everything as his own self.
He loves everyone as his own child.
All people are drawn to him.
He behaves like a little child.
Between birth and death,
Three in ten are followers of light.
Three in ten are followers of death.
And men just passing from birth to death,
Also number three in ten.
Why is this so?
Because they clutch to life and cling to this passing world.
But there is one out of ten,
They say,
So sure of life that tigers and wild bulls keep clear.
Weapons turn from him on the battlefield.
Rhinoceroses have no place to horn him.
Tigers find no place for claws.
And soldiers have no place to thrust their blades.
Why is this so?
Because he dwells in that place of Tao,
Where death cannot enter.
Realize your essence,
And you will witness the end without ending.
The way connects all living beings to their source.
It springs into existence,
Unconscious,
Perfect,
Free.
Takes on a physical body.
Let circumstances complete it.
Therefore,
All beings honor the way and value its virtue.
They have not been commanded to worship the Tao and do homage to virtue,
But they always do so,
Spontaneously.
The Tao gives them life.
Virtue nourishes and protects them,
Rears and shelters.
The Tao produces but does not possess.
The Tao gives without expecting.
The Tao fosters growth without ruling.
This is called hidden virtue.
All under heaven have a common beginning.
This beginning is the mother of the world.
Having known the mother,
We may proceed to know her children.
Having known the children,
We should go back and hold on to the mother.
Keep your mouth shut.
Guard the senses.
And life is ever full.
Open your mouth.
Always be busy.
And life is beyond hope.
Seeing the small is called clarity.
Keeping flexible is called strength.
Using the shining radiance,
You return again to the light and save yourself misfortune.
This is called the practice of eternal light.
If I have even just a little sense,
I should walk in the great way.
And my only fear would be straying.
The great way is very smooth and straight,
And yet the people prefer devious paths.
That is why the court is corrupt.
The fields lie in waste.
The granaries are empty.
Dressing magnificently,
Wearing a sharp sword,
Stuffing oneself with food and drink,
Amassing wealth to the extent of not knowing.
What to do with it is being like a robber.
I say this pomp at the expense of others is like the boasting of thieves after looting.
This is truly not the Tao.
Whoever is planted in the Tao will not be rooted up.
Whoever embraces the Tao will not slip away.
Generations honor generations endlessly.
Cultivated in the self,
Virtue is rooted in the Tao.
Virtue is realized.
Cultivated in the family,
Virtue overflows.
Cultivated in the community,
Virtue increases.
Cultivated in the state,
Virtue abounds.
The Tao is everywhere.
It has become everything.
To truly see it,
See it as it is.
In a person,
See it as a person.
In a family,
See it as a family.
In a country,
See it as a country.
In the world,
See it as the world.
How do I know this true?
By looking inside myself.
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 prey will not strike him.
Bones are weak,
Muscles are soft,
Yet his grasp is firm.
He has not experienced the union of man and woman,
But is whole.
He is strong.
He screams all day without being hoarse.
This is perfect harmony.
To know harmony is to know the changeless.
To know the changeless is to have insight.
Things in harmony with the Tao remain.
Things that are forced to grow for a while,
But then wither away.
This is not the Tao,
And whatever is against the Tao soon ceases to be.
Those who know do not talk.
Those who talk do not know.
Block all the passages.
Close your mouth.
Cordon off your senses.
Blunt your perceptions.
Blunt your sharpness.
Untie your knots.
Soften your glare.
Settle your dust.
This is primal union or the secret embrace.
One who knows this secret is not moved by attachment or aversion,
Swayed by profit or loss,
Nor touched by honor or disgrace.
He is far beyond the cares of men,
Yet comes to hold the dearest place in their hearts.
This,
Therefore,
Is the highest state of Tao.
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.
How do I know this to be so?
Because in this world,
The greater the restrictions and prohibitions,
The more people are impoverished.
The more advanced the weapons of state,
The darker the nation.
The more artful and crafty the plan,
The stranger the outcome.
The more laws are posted,
The more thieves appear.
Therefore,
The sage says,
I take no action and people are reformed.
I enjoy peace and people become honest.
I do nothing and people become rich.
If I keep from imposing on people,
They become themselves.
When the ruler knows his own heart,
The people are simple and pure.
When he meddles with their lives,
They become restless and disturbed.
Bad fortune is what good fortune leans on.
Good fortune is what bad fortune hides in.
Who knows the ultimate end of this process?
Is there no norm of right?
Yet what is normal soon becomes abnormal.
People's confusion is indeed long-standing.
Thus,
The master is content to serve as an example and not to impose his will.
He is pointed but does not pierce.
He straightens but does not disrupt.
He illuminates but does not dazzle.
In governing people and serving nature,
Nothing surpasses thrift and moderation.
Restraint begins with giving up one's own ideas.
This depends on virtue gathered in the past.
If there is a good store of virtue,
Then nothing is impossible.
If nothing is impossible,
Then there are no limits.
If a man knows no limits,
He is fit to lead.
This is the way to be deeply rooted and firmly planted in the Tao,
The secret of long life and lasting vision.
Governing a large county is like frying a small fish.
You spoil it with too much poking.
Approach the universe with the Tao,
And evil will have no power.
Not that evil is not powerful,
But its power will not be used to harm others.
Not only will it not do harm to others,
But the sage himself will also be protected.
If only the ruler and his people would refrain from harming each other,
All the benefits of life would accumulate in that place.
A great country is like the lowlands.
A great country is like the lowland,
Toward which all streams flow.
It is the reservoir of all under heaven,
The feminine of the world.
The female overcomes the male with stillness,
By lowering herself through her quietness.
So if a great country lowers itself before a small one,
It wins friendship and trust.
And if a small country can lower itself before a great one,
It will win over the great country.
The one wins by stooping,
The other by being humble.
The Tao is the treasure house,
The true nature,
The secret source of everything.
It is the treasure of the good man and the refuge of the bad.
If a person seems wicked,
Do not cast them away.
Awaken them with your words.
Elevate them with your deeds.
Repay their injury with your kindness.
Do not cast them away.
Cast away their wickedness.
Thus,
When a new leader is chosen,
Do not offer to help them with your wealth or your expertise.
Help them to meditate on the principle.
Offer instead to teach them about the Tao.
Why did the ancients make so much of the principle?
Is it not because it is the source of all good and the remedy for all wickedness?
It is not.
It is the most noble thing in the world.
So practice non-action.
Work without doing.
Taste the tasteless.
Magnify the small.
Increase the few.
Reward bitterness with care.
See simplicity in the complicated.
Achieve greatness in the little things.
Take on difficulties while they are still easy.
Do great things while they are still small.
The sage does not attempt anything very big and thus achieves greatness.
If you agree too easily,
You will be little trusted because the sage always confronts difficulties.
He never experiences them.
What is at rest is easily managed.
What is not yet manifest is easy to prevent.
The brittle is easily shattered.
The small is easily scattered.
Act before things exist.
Manage them before their disorder.
Remember,
A tree that fills a man's embrace grows from a seedling.
A tower nine stories high starts with one brick.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Act and destroy it.
Grasp it and lose it.
The sage does not act and so is not defeated.
He does not grasp and therefore does not lose.
People usually fail when they are on the verge of success.
So give as much care at the end as at the beginning.
Then there will be no failure.
The sage does not treasure what is difficult to attain.
He does not collect precious things.
He learns not to hold on to ideas.
He helps the ten thousand things find their own nature but does not venture to lead them by the nose.
The ancient ones were simple hearted and blended with the common people.
They did not shine forth.
They did not rule with cleverness.
So the nation was blessed.
When they think that they know the answers,
People are difficult to guide.
When they know that they do not know,
People can find their own way.
Not using cunning to govern a country is a good fortune for the country.
The simplest pattern is the clearest.
Content with an ordinary life,
You can show all the people back to their own true nature.
Why is the sea king of a hundred streams?
Because it lies below them.
Humility gives it its power.
Therefore,
Those desiring a position above others must speak humbly.
Those desiring to lead must follow.
Thus,
It is that when a sage stands above the people,
They do not feel the heaviness of his weight.
And when he stands in front of the people,
They do not feel hurt.
The sage stays low,
So the world never tries.
So the world never tires of exalting him.
He remains a servant,
So the world never tires of making him their leader.
All the world talks about my Tao.
With such familiarity,
What folly!
The Tao is not something found at the marketplace or passed on from father to son.
It is not something gained by knowing or lost by forgetting.
If the Tao were like this,
It would have been lost and forgotten long ago.
I have three treasures which I hold fast and watch closely.
The first is mercy.
The second is frugality.
The third is humility.
From mercy comes courage.
From frugality comes generosity.
From humility comes leadership.
Now,
If one were bold but had no mercy,
If one were broad but were not frugal,
If one went ahead without humility,
One would surely perish.
Love vanquishes all attackers.
It is impregnable in defense.
When heaven wants to protect someone,
Does it send an army?
No,
It protects them with love.
A good soldier is not violent.
A good fighter is not angry.
Good winners do not contend.
Good employers serve their workers.
The best leader follows the will of the people.
All of them embody the virtue of non-competition.
This is called the virtue of non-contending.
This is called employing the powers of others.
This,
Since ancient times,
Has been known as the ultimate unity with heaven.
There is a saying among soldiers,
I dare not make the first move but would rather play the guest.
I dare not advance an inch but would rather withdraw a foot.
This is called going forward without advancing,
Pushing back without weapons.
There is no greater misfortune than feeling I have an enemy.
For when I and enemy exist together,
There is no room left for my treasure.
Thus,
When two opponents meet,
The one without an enemy will surely triumph.
When armies are evenly matched,
The one with more compassion wins.
My teachings are very easy to understand and very easy to practice.
Yet so few in this world understand and so few are able to practice.
My words have an ancestor.
My deeds have a lord.
The people have no knowledge of this.
Therefore,
They have no knowledge of me.
This is why the sage dresses plainly,
Even though his interior is filled with precious gems.
Knowing ignorance is strength.
Ignoring knowledge is sickness.
Only when we are sick of our sickness shall we cease to be sick.
The sage is not sick but is sick of sickness.
This is the secret of Tao.
When people lack a sense of awe,
There will be disaster.
When people do not fear worldly power,
A greater power will arrive.
Do not limit the view of yourself.
Do not despise the conditions of your birth.
Do not resist the natural course of your life.
In this way,
You will never weary of this world.
Therefore,
The sage knows himself but makes no show of himself,
Loves himself but does not exalt himself.
He prefers what is within to what is without.
Bold action against the world is a good thing.
Bold action against others leads to death.
Bold action in harmony with the Tao leads to life.
Both of these things sometimes benefit and sometimes injure.
It is heaven's way to conquer without striving.
It does not speak,
Yet it is answered.
It does not ask,
Yet it is supplied with all that it needs.
It does not hurry,
Yet it completes everything on time.
The net of heaven catches all.
Its mesh is coarse,
But nothing slips through.
If you realize that all things change,
There is nothing you will try to hold on to.
If you are not afraid of dying,
There is nothing you cannot achieve.
There is always a Lord of Death.
He who takes the place of the Lord of Death is like one who cuts with the blade of a master carpenter.
Whoever cuts with the blade of a master carpenter is sure to cut his own hand.
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,
And leave them alone.
Yet a man is born gentle and weak.
At his death he is hard and stiff.
All things,
Including the grass and trees,
Are soft and pliable in life,
Dry and brittle in death.
Stiffness is thus a companion of death,
Flexibility a companion of life.
An army that cannot yield will be defeated.
A tree that cannot bend will crack in the wind.
The hard and stiff will eventually be broken.
The soft and supple will prevail.
The way of heaven is like drawing a bow.
The high is lowered,
The low is raised.
When it is surplus,
It reduces.
When it is deficient,
It increases.
The Tao of mankind is the opposite.
It reduces the deficiency in order to add to the surplus.
It strips the needy to serve those who have too much.
Only the one who has the Tao offers his surplus to others.
What man has more than enough and gives it to the world?
Only the man of the Tao.
The master can keep giving because there is no end to his wealth.
He acts without exception,
Succeeds without taking credit,
And does not think that he is better than anyone else.
Nothing in the world is softer and weaker than water.
But for attacking the hard,
The unyielding,
Nothing can surpass it.
There is nothing like it.
The weak overcomes the strong,
The soft surpasses the hard.
In all the world there is no one who does not know this,
But no one can master the practice.
Therefore,
The master remains serene in the midst of sorrow.
Evil cannot enter their heart.
Because they have given up helping,
He is people's greatest help.
True words appear paradoxical.
After a bitter quarrel,
Some resentment remains.
What can one do about it?
Being content with what you have is always the best in the end.
Someone must risk returning injury with kindness,
Or hostility will never turn to goodwill.
So the wise always give without expecting gratitude.
One with true virtue always seeks a way to give.
One who lacks true virtue always seeks a way to get.
To the giver comes the fullness of life.
To the taker,
Just an empty hand.
True words are not beautiful.
Beautiful words are often not true.
Good men rarely argue.
Those who argue are not good.
Those who have virtue do not look for faults.
Those who look for faults have no virtue.
Sages do not accumulate anything,
But give everything to others.
Having more,
The more they give.
Heaven does good to all,
Doing no evil to anyone.
The sage imitates it,
Acting for the good of all,
And opposing himself to no one.
If you have made it this far,
I appreciate you deeply.
My name is Silas Day,
And I hope you enjoyed this reading of the Wayne Dyer translation of the Tao Te Ching.
I find it incredibly interesting to look at this ancient philosophy of Taoism and see how it can relate to the modern day.
If you enjoyed this and wish to support me,
The easiest and best thing to do is to follow me here on Insight Timer.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you learned something,
Or at least found it interesting.
And have a wonderful day.
4.8 (54)
Recent Reviews
Nathan
December 24, 2025
I listened to it over two sessions, very relatable to living an honest life today. Always enjoy the way in which you talk, comforting and warm, but remaining informative and direct.
Ahimsa
March 11, 2025
Very pleasant! Much appreciated! www.gratefulness.org, ahimsa www.compassioncourse.org
Sara
September 1, 2024
Enthusiastically- Thank you!!
Faith
June 14, 2024
Best of the best translation, rhythm, voice, the Book, it is beyond words
Matt
September 24, 2023
Thank you for that enlightening reading. It was easy to follow and truly eye opening. Namaste 💚
