Lao Tzu & Tao Te Ching
Lao Tzu’s Tao Te Ching, the tiny book of wisdom that take the world by storm since more than two centuries ago, is extolled as one of the wisest book ever written in the human history.
Many parts of the ancient book, unfortunately, are really not easy to comprehend.
Known also as Dao De Ching (道德经), the book was written by Lao Tzu 2,500 years ago in China. It’s believed to be the second most translated work in the world after Bible.
Although consists of only 5,000 Chinese characters, the book is an ever-flowing spring of wisdom. It is timeless — transcending historical and cultural confines. It has tremendous impact on people all over the world, and has earned accolades from some of the finest minds of the human race.
To help you with some basic understanding of the book, we have prepared a series of articles and video presentations. We hope you’ll like them, and looking forward to your feedback.
Read more about Lao Tzu and Tao Teh Ching:
What is Tao?
5 reasons what Tao is hard to explain
- Tao is too small to know
- Tao is too big to know
- Tao is too old to know
- Tao has no shape, it can be in any shape
Wuwei/Non Doing
- Let Go of Excess Baggage in Life
- Start Your Day by Wanting Less
- Examples of Wuwei
- What is Wu Wei? Powerful without Strive
- Master By Not Mastering – The Art of Wu wei
- All that glitters is not gold
- How you can flow with nature
- Sucess by Doing Nothing
- Tao Gives You More Freedom
- To have a life of DOING you need to NOT DO
Yin Yang & Yinyang Balance
- Is Yang Good and Yin Bad?
- Where are Yin Yang mentioned in Tao Te Ching?
- The Balance of Yin and Yang
- Value in Emptiness
- Sleep when the universe sleeps and awakes to its vitality
- Lao Tzu’s Antidote for Anxiety & Stress
- Yin Yang Symbol
- Seeing Black in White
- No Good or Bad about Yin Yang
- What are yin and yang and why are they important to me?
Being & Nonbeing
- Having & Not Having in Tao Te Ching
- A Pot is Useful for its Emptiness
- Tao Te Ching Verse 11 – Pot & Emptiness – Video Tutorial
Softness
- A man is born gentle and weak, at his death he is hard and stiff
- First Step Towards Longevity
- Tao Gives You More Freedom
- How the Tea Master fight the powerful Swordsman in a Duel