<meta name="LineWrap" content="false">
<title>02 - Chapters 10 - 18</title>
<a href="TTC01"><< Prev Page</a> | <a href="TTC00">Contents</a> | <a href="TTC03">Next Page >></a>


10.

Can you hold on to your ego
and still stay focused on Tao?

Can you relax your mind and body
and brace yourself for a new life?

Can you check yourself
and see past 
what's in front of your eyes?

Can you be a leader
and not try to prove you're in charge?

Can you deal with what's happening
and let it happen?

Can you forget what you know
and understand what's real?

Start a job and see it through.
Have things 
without holding on to them.
Do the job 
without expectation of reward.
Lead people 
without giving orders.
That's the way you do it.


11.

A wheel has spokes,
but it rotates around a hollow center.

A pot is made out of clay or glass,
but you keep things in the space inside.

A house is made of wood or brick,
but you live between the walls.

We work with something,
but we use nothing.


12.

Sight obscures.
Noise deafens.

Desire messes with your heart.
The world messes with your mind.

A Master watches the world
but keeps focused on what's real.


13.

Winning can be just as bad as losing.
Confidence can mess you up 
just as much as fear.

What does 
"winning can be just as bad as losing" mean?

If you're down,
you might be able to get up.
But if you're up, 
you can get knocked down real fast.
Don't worry about the score,
just do what you have to do.

What does 
"confidence can mess you up 
just as much as fear" mean?

Fear can keep you 
from getting the job done,
but confidence 
can get you in over your head.
Walk tall, but don't get cocky.

Know your limits, 
and nothing can ever hold you back.
Deal with what you can. 
The rest will follow.


14.

You can't see Tao, 
no matter how hard you look.
You can't hear Tao, 
no matter how hard you listen.
You can't hold on to Tao, 
no matter how hard you grab.

But it's there.

It's in you, and it's all around you.

Remember that.


15.

The ancient Masters 
were damn impressive.
They were deep. Real deep.
Words can't even begin to describe 
how deep they were.
You can only talk 
about how they acted.

They were careful, 
like a man walking on thin ice.
They were cautious, 
like a soldier behind enemy lines.
They were polite,
like a guest at a party.
They moved quickly, like melting ice. 
They were as plain as a block of wood.
Their minds were as wide as a valley,
and their hearts as clear 
as spring water.

Can you wait 
for that kind of openness and clarity
before you try to understand the world?

Can you hold still
until events have unfolded
before you do the right thing?

When you act without expectations,
you can accomplish great things.


16.

Keep your head clear.
Stay calm.
Watch 
as everything happens around you.

Everything reverts 
to its original state, 
which was nothing.
And when something becomes nothing, 
it gets right with Tao.

If you don't understand that,
you're going to screw up 
somewhere down the line.
If you figure it out,
you'll always know what to do.

If you get right with Tao,
you won't be afraid to die,
because you know you will.


17.

When a Master takes charge,
hardly anybody notices.
The next best leader 
is obeyed out of love.
After that, 
there's the leader obeyed out of fear.
The worst leader is one who is hated.

Trust and respect people.
That's how you earn 
their trust and respect.

The Masters don't give orders;
they work with everybody else.
When the job's done,
people are amazed 
at what they accomplished.


<a href="TTC01"><< Prev Page</a> | <a href="TTC00">Contents</a> | <a href="TTC03">Next Page >></a>