Between birth and death,
Three in time are following life,
Three in ten are following death,
And men just passing from birth to death also number three in ten.
Why is this so?
Because they live their lives on the gross level.
He who knows how to live can walk abroad
Without fear of rhinocerous or tiger.
He will not be wounded in battle.
For in him rhinoceroses can find no place to thrust their horn,
Tigers can find no place to use their claws,
And weapons no place to pierce.
Why is this so? Because he has no place for death to enter.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Monday, March 10, 2008
The Nonjudgemental Type by Dr. Andre Muhammad
The sage has no predetermined mindset, and he/she is aware of the needs of others. The sage treats those who are kind with kindness, and he/she treats those who are unkind with kindness. The sage understands that kindness is the nature of humans.
The sage is faithful to both the faithful and unfaithful. The sage is one who sees and understands the connections of the things in the heavens and the earth. This individual is often well-liked, as people are often to drawn to him/her.
Peace and blessings!
The sage is faithful to both the faithful and unfaithful. The sage is one who sees and understands the connections of the things in the heavens and the earth. This individual is often well-liked, as people are often to drawn to him/her.
Peace and blessings!
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Living by Decreasing by Dr. Andre Muhammad
According to verse 48, people demonstrate learning by a daily accumulation of information and/or things. The practice of the Tao involves just the opposite, as it concerns itself to a daily diminishing of this so-called information and/or things. More specifically, an individual should come to understand that he/she must reverse the idea of increasing as a means of showing mastery in this world. In fact, when an individual sees the importance of decreasing, he or she will experience a broader realization of completeness.
Peace and blessings!
Peace and blessings!
Labels:
Self-Understanding,
self-worth,
spirituality,
tao,
Verse 48
Friday, March 7, 2008
Mind Travel by Dr. Andre Muhammad
For people who have developed insight, they have the potential to travel the globe without leaving their places of abode. They have the ability to glimpse into the heavens without even looking out the windows. Therefore, the sage knows without travelling, sees without looking, and does work without working.
Peace and blessings!
Peace and blessings!
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Living in Peace by Dr. Andre Muhammad
When the Way is lost, war becomes the order of the day for the countries across the globe. For people, a sense of discontentment overwhelms. Unless an individual discovers the more peaceful lifestyle of the Tao Te Ching, he/she will attempt to gauge achievement based on that which has been accumulated. For those who adhere to the Tao Te Ching, true achievement is measured by a healthy degree of inner-peace and happiness.
Peace and blessings!
Peace and blessings!
Labels:
tao,
Tao Te Ching,
True Happiness,
Verse 46
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Beyond the Superficial by Dr. Andre Muhammad
As a person who is attempting to live my life in accordance with the Tao, I must begin to view life in a paradoxical manner. First, I must come to understand that the greatest perfections seem imperfect. I must come to understand that the greatest fullness seems empty. I must eventually grow to understand that the great straightness seems twisted. Further, I must come to understand that the great intelligence seems stupid, the great eloquence seems awkward, and the great truth seems false.
The real truth lies in the understanding of paradox. The paradox represents the oneness of all things.
Peace and blessings!
The real truth lies in the understanding of paradox. The paradox represents the oneness of all things.
Peace and blessings!
Monday, March 3, 2008
Knowing When to Stop by Dr. Andre Muhammad
The following entry will not be long because of the mere title of it. In verse 44 of the Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu directs readers to take a close look at the lives they are living. In fact, the questions posed are, which means more to you, you or your fame? Which brings more to you, you or what you own? Later, in the verse, Lao Tzu states that what one gains is more trouble than what one loses. Further, it states that a contented person is never disappointed, for he/she who knows when to stop is preserved from peril, as this individual is poised to endure long.
Sunday, March 2, 2008
The Universe Teaches by Dr. Andre Muhammad
In life, most of us attempt to excel at what we do. We create benchmarks, goals, and then we set out to achieve them. In doing so, we often become so firm in our desire to achieve that our actions and personality are hardened to a large degree. We often elicit a very strong persona, one which symbolizes that no matter what, we intend to get what we are after in life.
The 43rd verse of the Tao speaks to this school of thought. It suggests that that the softest things overrides the hardest of all things. Further, it states that things without substance are in a better position to enter where there is no space. Perhaps, Lao Tzu, was making a reference to water, as water has the means to override all things that are hard. If one examines water closely, though it is soft and without substance, it still has the ability to destroy that which is hard. For example, the flow of water can create a pattern on any of the hardest substances that you can think of. When I think about water, I think about the Tao. I say this because water has the ability to flow in many places, and it seeps where it pleases.
On the other hand, water symbolizes calmness. Calmness is symbolic to water in that it remains constant as a life-giving substance to all living things. We can learn a great deal from observing water, and we can learn even more from observing the many elements of our universe. The universe is the great teacher. As human, we must come to understand the lessons of the universe, for it teaches without words and it performs without actions. The masters understand this, and this is why few of us matriculate to the level of the masters.
Peace and blessings!
Labels:
Calmness,
Lao Tzu,
spirituality,
tao,
Verse 43
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Cultivating the Infinite Self by Dr. Andre Muhammad
People have a tendency to become attached and almost dependent to various things within life. We become attached to family, friends, and material possessions. What if we were to lose some of these things? Perhaps we would feel that we have lost a great deal. Perhaps we would feel that the worst thing in our lives has occurred if we were to ever lose any of our family members, friends, or material possessions; yet, many of those who have often risen to power of some sort have in fact described having lost or been without these very things at earlier stages in their lives. According to the 42nd verse of the Tao Te Ching, when one feels that he/she has lost, he/she has actually gained. The individual gains in the sense that his/her once-thought feeling of dependency is ameliorated and the person, subsequently, finds him/herself having to cope with the loss. It is during this process of coping in which the individual comes to realize the inner-strength and infinite self is not dependent on anything. It is only the mortal aspect of the individual that feels dependent on such worldly things.
The mortal aspect of ourselves is what unfortunately rules most of our existence. Because we become so fixated on the needs and desires of the mortal self, we are often unable to cultivate and come to know the infinite self. Just as the Tao advises that one gains when losing, it is also perceived that one loses by gaining.
For whom much is given, much is expected. The question becomes, then, how are we utilizing that which has been granted?
As humans, no matter what we possess, the mission appears to be very clear. We should not become attached to worldly things, as each of these things are temporal. Our mission, as humans, is to connect to the things which are eternal, so that we come to be in harmony with our infinite selves. To achieve harmony with our infinite selves, we must be willing to transcend the needs of our mortal selves.
Peace and blessings!
Labels:
Infinite Self,
spirituality,
Verse 42,
wealth
Friday, February 29, 2008
Tao is for the Wise by Dr. Andre Muhammad
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