According to tradition Taoism originated with a man named Lao Tzu, said to have been born about 604 B.C. He is a shadowy figure. We know nothing for certain about him and scholars wonder if there ever was such a man. We do not even know his name, for Lao Tzu-which can be translated "the Old Boy", "the Old Fellow", or "the Grand Old Master" - is obviously a title of endearment and respect.
All we really have is a mosaic of legends. Some of these are fantastic: that he was conceived by a shooting star, carried in his mother's womb for eighty-two years, and born already a wise old man with white hair. Other parts of the story do not tax our credulity: that he kept the archives in his native western state, and that around this occupation he wove a simple and unassertive life. Inferences concerning his personality derive almost entirely from a single slim volume attributed to him. From this some conclude that he was probably a solitary recluse who was absorbed in occult meditations; others picture him as down to earth - a genial neighbor with a lively sense of humor.
The only purportedly contemporary portrait, reported by
Appearance
His description suggests that the strange man baffled him while leaving him respectful. "I know a bird can fly; I
know a fish can swim; I know animals can run.
Creatures that run can be caught in nets; those that swim can be caught in wicker traps; those that fly can be hit by arrows. But the dragon is beyond my knowledge; it ascends into heaven on the clouds and the wind. Today I
have seen Lao Tzu, and he is like the dragon!"
The traditional portrait concludes with the report that Lao Tzu, saddened by his people's disinclination to cultivate the natural goodness he advocated and seeking personal solitude for his closing years, he climbed on a water buffalo and rode westward toward what is now Tibet. At the
Tao Te Ching - The Way and Its Power
Lao Tzu didn't preach. He didn't organize or promote. He wrote a few pages on request, rode off on a water buffalo, and that was it as far as he was concerned.
How unlike the Buddha, who trudged the dusty roads of
How unlike Confucius, who pestered dukes and princes, trying to gain an administrative foothold (or at least a hearing) for his ideas.
Here was a man so little concerned with the success of his surmises, to say nothing of fame and fortune, that he didn't even stay around to answer questions. And yet, whether the story of his life is fact or fiction, it is so true to Taoists attitudes that it will remain a part of Taoism forever.
On the Three Meanings of Tao
On opening Taoism's bible, the Tao Te Ching, we sense at once that everything revolves around the pivotal concept of Tao itself.
Literally, this word means path, or way. There are three senses, however, in which this "way" can be understood.
First, Tao is the way of the ultimate reality. This Tao cannot be perceived or even clearly conceived, for it is too vast for human rationality to fathom. The Tao Te Ching announces in its opening line that words are not equal to it: "the Tao that can be spoken is not the true Tao." Nevertheless, this ineffable and transcendent Tao is the ground of all that follows. Above all, behind all, beneath all is the Womb from which all life springs and to which it returns.
Awed by the thought of it, the Tao Te Ching bursts recurrently into praise, for this primal Tao confronts him with life's basic mystery, the mystery of all mysteries. "How clear it is! How quiet it is! It must be something eternally existing!" "Of all great things, surely Tao is the greatest." But its ineffability cannot be denied, so we are taunted, time and again, by Taoism's teasing epigram: "Those who know don't say. Those who say don't know."
Though Tao is ultimately transcendent, it is also immanent. In this secondary sense it is the way of the universe, the norm, the rhythm, the driving power in all nature, the ordering principle behind all life. Behind, but also in the midst of all life, for when Tao enters this second mode it "assume flesh" and informs all things. It "adapts its vivid essence, clarifies its manifold fullness, subdues its resplendent luster, and assumes the likeness of dust."
Basically spirit rather than matter, it cannot be exhausted; the more it is drawn upon, the more it flows, for it is "that fountain ever on," to the Tao, his One. There it marks inevitability, for when autumn comes "no leaf is spared because of its beauty, no flower because of its fragrance."
Yet, ultimately, it is benign. Graceful instead of abrupt, flowing rather than hesitant, it is infinitely generous. Giving life to all things, it may be called "the Mother of the World."
Augmented Power: Taoist Yoga
Taoist practitioners were engaged in training programs of some sort, many of them demanding - were not willing to settle for the philosophers' goal of managing their allotments of the Tao efficiently. They wanted to go beyond conserving to increasing the quota of the Tao they had to work with. In accounting terms we can say that if Philosophical Taoists worked at increasing net profits by cutting costs (reducing needless energy expenditures), Taoist adepts wanted to increase gross income.
The word ch'i cries out to be recognized as the rightful entry to this second school, for though it literally means breath, it actually means vital energy. The Taoists used it to refer to the power of the Tao that they experienced coursing through them-or not coursing because it was blocked-and their main object was to further its flow. Ch'i fascinated these Taoists. Blake registered their feelings precisely when he exclaimed, "Energy is a delight," for energy is the life force and the Taoist loved life. To be alive is good; to be more alive is better; to be always alive is best, hence the Taoist immortality cults.
To accomplish their end of maximizing ch'i, these Taoists worked with three things: matter, movement, and their minds.
What they really wanted was a increase-increase and extension of the life force, the ultimate guarantor of which would be the much-sought elixir of life that would insure physical immortality.
Breathing exercises were also developed. Working with air, the subtlest form of matter, they sought to draw ch'i from the atmosphere.
These efforts to extract ch'i from matter in its solid, liquid, and gaseous forms were supplemented by programs of bodily movement such as t'ai chi chuan, which gathers, meditation, yin/yang philosophy, and martial art into a synthesis that in this case was designed to draw ch'i from the cosmos and dislodge blocks to its internal flow. This last was the object of acupuncture as well.
Meditation
Finally, turning to the mind itself, contemplatives, many of them hermits, developed Taoist meditation. This practice involved shutting out distractions and emptying the mind to the point where the power of the Tao might bypass bodily filters and enter the self directly.
To arrive at this inwardness it was necessary to reverse all self-seeking and cultivate perfect cleanliness of thought and body. Pure spirit can be known only in a life that is "garnished and swept." Only where all is clean will it reveal itself; therefore "put self aside." Perturbing emotions must likewise be quelled. Ruffling the surface of the mind, they prevent introspection from seeing past them to the springs of consciousness beneath. Desire and revulsion, grief and joy, delight and annoyance - each must subside if the mind is to return to its original purity, for in the end only peace and stillness are good for it. Let anxiety be dispelled and harmony between the mind and its cosmic source will come unsought.
It is close at hand, stands indeed at our very side; yet is intangible, a thing that by reaching for cannot be got.
Remote it seems as the furthest limit of the Infinite. Yet it is not far off; every day we use its power. For the Way of the Vital Spirit fills our whole frames, yet man cannot keep track of it. It goes, yet has not departed. It comes, yet is not here. It is muted, make no note that can be heard, yet of a sudden we find that it is there in mind. Its dim and dark, showing no outward form, yet in a great stream it flowed into us at our birth.
Selflessness, cleanliness, and emotional calm are the preliminaries to arriving at full self knowledge, but they must be climaxed by deep meditation. "Bide in silence, and the radiance of the spirit shall come in and make its home." For this to happen all outward impressions must be stilled and the senses withdrawn to a completely interior point of focus. Postures paralleling the Indian asanas were recommended, and the breath must be similarly controlled; it must be as soft and light as that of an infant, or even an embryo in the womb. The result will be a condition of alert waiting known as "sitting with a blank mind."
Realisation
And when the realization arrives, what then? With it come truth, joy, and power. The climatic insight of meditational Taoism came with the impact of finality, everything at last having fallen into place. The condition could not be described as merely pleasurable. The direct perception of the source of one's awareness as "serene and immovable, like a monarch on a throne," brought joy unlike any hitherto known. The social utility of the condition, however, lay in the extraordinary power it provided over people and things, a power in fact which "could shift Heaven and Earth." A ruler who is desireless himself and has this much psychic power automatically turns his subjects from their unruly desires. He rules without even being known to rule.
“The sage relies on actionless activity; Puts himself in the background; but is always to the fore. Remains outside; but is always there. Is it not just because he does no t strive for any personal end That all his personal ends are fulfilled?“
The Mingling of the Powers Taoism, vitalizing programs for increasing one's individual ch'i, the three branches of Taoism all have the same concern - how to maximize the Tao's animating te - and the specifics of their concerns fall on a continuum. The continuum begins with interest in how life's normal allotment of ch'i can be deployed to best effect.
To be something, to know something, and to be capable of something is to rise above the superficial. A life has
substance to the degree that it incorporates the profundity of mysticism (Taoist yoga), the direct wisdom of gnosis (Philosophical Taoism), and the productive power of magic (Religious Taoism). Where these three things come together there is a "school," and in
Tao
In a way its virtue approached from a direction opposite to that of Confucius. Confucius turned every effort to building a pattern of ideal responses that might be consciously imitated. Taoism's approach is the opposite-to get the foundations of the self in tune with Tao and let behavior flow spontaneously.
Action follows being; new action will follow new being, wiser being, stronger being. The Tao Te Ching puts this
point without wasting a word. "The way to do," it says, "is to be."
How are we to describe the action that flows from a life that is grounded directly in Tao. Nurtured by a force that
is infinitely subtle, infinitely intricate, it is a consummate gracefulness born from an abundant vitality that has no
need for abruptness or violence. One simply lets the Tao flow in and flow out again until all life becomes a dance in which there is neither feverishness nor imbalance.
Far from inaction, however, it is the embodiment of suppleness, simplicity, and freedom - a kind of pure effectiveness in which no motion is wasted on outward show. “One may move so well that a foot-print never shows, Speak so well that the tongue never slips, Reckon so well that no counter is needed.“
The natural phenomenon that the Taoists saw as bearing the closest resemblance to Tao was water. They were struck by the way it would support objects and carry them effortlessly on its tide. One who understands the basic life force knows that it will sustain one if one stops thrashing and flailing and trusts oneself to its support.
“Do you have the patience to wait till your mud settles and the water is clear? Can you remain unmoving till the right action arises by itself? “
Water, then was the closest parallel to the Tao in the natural world. They noticed the way water adapts itself to its surroundings and seeks out the lowest places. So too, “The supreme good is like water, which nourishes all things without trying to. It is content with the low places people disdain. Thus it is like the Tao.“
Yet despite the accommodations, water holds a power unknown to hard and brittle things. In a stream it follows the stones' sharp edges, only to turn them into pebbles, rounded to conform to its streamlined flow. It works its way past frontiers and under dividing walls. Its gentle current melts rocks and carries away the proud hills we call eternal.
“Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water. Yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible, nothing can surpass it.”
“The soft overcomes the hard; the gentle overcomes the rigid. Everyone knows this is true, but few can put it in to practice. “Infinitely supple, yet incomparably strong - these virtues of water the person who embodies this condition, says the Tao Te Ching, "works without working." Such a one acts without strain, persuades without argument, is eloquent with out flourish, and achieves results without violence, coercion, or pressure. Though the agent may be scarcely noticed, his or her influence is in fact decisive.
A leader is best when people barely know that he exists. Of a good leader, who talks little, When his work is done, his aim fulfilled, they will say, "We did this ourselves."
A final characteristic of water that makes it an appropriate is the clarity it attains through being still. "Muddy
water let stand," say the Tao Te Ching, "will clear." If you want to study the stars after being in a brightly lit
room, you must wait twenty minutes for your eyes to dilate for their new assignment. There must be similar
periods of waiting if the focal length of the mind is to readjust, withdrawing from the world's glare to the internal
recesses of the soul.
“The five colors can blind, the five tones deafen, the five tastes cloy. The race, the hunt, can drive men mad and their booty leave them no peace. Therefore a sensible man prefers the inner to the outer eye.“
Taoism Values
Still following the analogy of water, the Taoists rejected all forms of self-assertiveness and competition. The world is full of people who are determined to be somebody or give trouble. They want to get ahead, to stand out. Taoism has little use for such ambitions.
“He who stands on tiptoe doesn't stand firm. He who rushes ahead doesn't go far. He who tries to shine dims his own light.“ There is a profound naturalism in Taoist thought, but it is the naturalism of a Rousseau, a
The earth is like a vessel so sacred That at the mere approach of the profane It is marred and when they reach out their fingers it is gone."
Nature is to be befriended. Taoism seeks atonement with nature, not dominance. Its approach is ecological. This Taoist approach to nature deeply affected Chinese art. "Let the people return to the use of knotted cords. Let them obtain their food sweet, their clothing beautiful, their homes comfortable, their rustic tasks pleasurable." Travel was discouraged as pointless and conducive to idle curiosity. "The neighboring state might be so near at hand that one could hear the cocks crowing in it and dogs barking. But the people would grow old and die without ever having been there."
It was this preference for naturalness and simplicity that most separated the Taoist from the Confucian. The basic objectives of the two schools did not differ widely, but the Taoist had small patience with the Confucian approach to them.
All formalism, show, and ceremony left them cold. Confucianism here was but one instance of the human tendency to approach life in regulated mode. All calculated systems, the very attempt to arrange life in a shipshape order, is pointless.
Another Feature of Taoism is its notion of the relativity of all values and, as its correlative, the identity of opposites. Here Taoism tied in with the traditional Chinese Yin/Yang symbol.
This sums up all of life's basic opposites: good/evil, active/passive, positive/negative, light/dark, summer/winter, male/female. But though the halves are in tension, they are not flatly opposed; they complement and balance each other. Each invades the other's hemisphere and takes up its abode in the deepest recess of its partner's domain. And in the end both find themselves resolved by the circle that surrounds them, the Tao in its eternal wholeness. In the context of that wholeness, the opposites appear as no more than phases in an endless cycling process, for each turns incessantly into its opposite, exchanging places with it. Life does not move onward and upward towards a fixed pinnacle or pole. It bends back upon itself to come, full circle, to the realization that all is one and all is well.
Conclusion
Circling around each other like yin and yang themselves, Taoism and Confucianism represent the two indigenous poles of the Chinese character.
Confucius represents the classical, Lao Tzu the romantic. Confucius stresses social responsibility, Lao Tzu praises spontaneity and naturalness. Confucius' focus is on the human, Lao Tzu's on what transcends the human. As the Chinese themselves say, Confucius roams within society, Lao Tzu wanders beyond. Something in life reaches out in each of these directions, and Chinese civilization would certainly have been poorer if either had not appeared.
Of the Tao, Lao Tze wrote: “There is a being, wonderful, perfect; It existed before heaven and earth. How quiet it is! How spiritual it is! It stands alone and it does not change. It moves around and around, but does not on this account suffer. All life comes from it. It wraps everything with its love as in a garment, and yet it claims no honor, it does not demand to be Lord. I do not know its name, and so I call it Tao, the Way, and I rejoice in its Their highest achievement is to identify themselves with the Tao and let it works its magic through them power.”
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