If you realize that all things change, there is nothing you will try to hold on to. If you are not afraid of dying, there is nothing you cannot achieve.
Lao TzuTags: attachment
Where the Mystery is the deepest is the gate of all that is subtle and wonderful.
Lao TzuSo it is that existence and non-existence give birth the one to (the idea of) the other;
Lao TzuTherefore the sage manages affairs without doing anything, and conveys his instructions without the use of speech.
Lao TzuThe Tao is (like) the emptiness of a vessel; and in our employment of it we must be on our guard against all fulness.
Lao TzuHe who feels punctured
Must once have been a bubble,
He who feels unarmed
Must have carried arms,
He who feels belittled
Must have been consequential,
He who feels deprived
Must have had privilege.
Tags: ego-archetype
Shrinking looked they like those who wade through a stream in winter;
Lao TzuThus Spoke Zarathustra (German: Also sprach Zarathustra, sometimes translated Thus Spake Zarathustra), subtitled A Book for All and None (Ein Buch für Alle und Keinen), is a written work by German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, composed in four parts between 1883 and 1885. Much of the work deals with ideas such as the "eternal recurrence of the same", the parable on the "death of God", and the "prophecy" of the Overman, which were first introduced in The Gay Science.
Described by Nietzsche himself as "the deepest ever written", the book is a dense and esoteric treatise on philosophy and morality, featuring as protagonist a fictionalized Zarathustra. A central irony of the text is that the style of the Bible is used by Nietzsche to present ideas of his which fundamentally oppose Judaeo-Christian morality and tradition.
he who is self-conceited has no superiority allowed to him.
Lao Tzuhe who vaunts himself does not find his merit acknowledged;
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