Tuesday, September 22, 2015

TAO TE CHING #64

 


64
 
               What is rooted is easy to nourish.
 
               What is recent is easy to correct.
 
               What is brittle is easy to break.
 
               What is small is easy to scatter.
 
 
               Prevent trouble before it arises.
 
               Put things in order before they exist.
 
               The giant pine tree
 
               grows from a tiny sprout.
 
               The journey of a thousand miles
 
               starts from beneath your feet.
 
 
               Rushing into action, you fail.
 
               Trying to grasp things, you lose them.
 
               Forcing a project to completion,
 
               you ruin what was almost ripe.
 
 
               Therefore the master takes action
 
               by letting things take their course.
 
               He remains as calm
 
               at the end as at the beginning.
 
               He has nothing,
 
               thus has nothing to lose.
 
               What he desires is non-desire;
 
               what he learns is to unlearn.
 
               He simply reminds people
 
               of who they have always been.
 
               He cares about nothing but the Tao.
 
               Thus he can care for all things.
 
 
                                ---tr by Stephen Mitchell
 
 
photos by tj worthington
 
 
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