What's 'Right'?

[Note: I italicize phrases I borrow from the chapter, and link to phrases I borrow from other chapters to help tie chapters together. While making it more tedious to read, :? the Tao Te Ching is best pondered in the context of the whole.]

The best of all rulers is but a shadowy presence to his subjects, and so on, applies to all aspects of life. Although, it is easiest to see in the relationship of parents to their children, and employers to employees. For example, being a shadowy presence in a child's 'knowing' allows children to blossom naturally, rather than conform to their rulers' (parents') [chref=57]desires[/chref]. Lacking sufficient maturity for that, parents become 'best friends' with their kids. Lacking that, parents use authoritarian parental dominance, and [chref=38]when no one responds, [they] roll up their sleeves and resorts to persuasion by force[/chref]. Finally come those parents who, being children themselves and driven by many [chref=19]thoughts of self[/chref], are easily manipulated by kids who now rule the roost. The employer -- employee dynamics are similar except that these two 'chose' each other. (That brings in a whole other set of dynamics, eh? Enough to write a book on I dare say.)

The desire to be in control is an underlying emotion in all our relationships with life. 'All' meaning ALL, i.e., our relationship to the ground beneath our feet; to our plans and projects; to the weather; to our body and mind, all people, all animals, etc. What does it mean to be a shadowy presence? First, this does not mean being gone! It means being fully present yet shadowy. A shadowy presence comes from [chref=71]knowing, yet thinking that one does not know[/chref]. A [chref=15]tentative[/chref] and hesitant air envelopes all relationships, helping life flow more naturally. Of course, the irony is that we tend to 'freak out' when life starts to 'flow more naturally' – we feel we're losing control. In the end, it is all about our visceral need to control life. Why this desire to control life? The less able we are to [chref=33]overcome our selves[/chref], the more we feel a need to [chref=33]overcome others[/chref] – plain and simple. Overcome? Not as we usually understand it; rather, [chref=36]the submissive and weak will overcome the hard and strong[/chref] kind of overcoming. Submissive and weak does not mean we don't [chref=33]persevere[/chref]. To the contrary, only through [chref=40]weakness[/chref] are we truly able to persevere. In persevering, our [chref=64]desire[/chref] to control life wanes, as our shadowy and hesitant presence waxes.

Finally, here's the plain and simple literal translation:
greatest (superior), below (inferior) know of have.
its next intimate and of reputation (praise).
its next fear (respect).
its next insult (bully).
true (trust; believe) not enough herein (where; how; why), have not true herein (where; how; why).
long time its value speech (word, say, speak), merit (result, work) accomplish (finish) affair satisfy,
hundred names (common people) all say I natural (at ease, free from affectation).


And now with some selective pruning with my poetic license:
The greatest is beneath knowing.
Next comes that we hold dear and admire.
Next comes that we respect and fear.
Next comes that we insult and abuse.
Where truth is insufficient, there is no truth therein.
Slow to speak, results in accomplishing affairs satisfactorily,
Everyone will say I am natural and at ease.


Note: There is no 'ruler' per se in the original. Without 'the ruler', it is easier to see how this chapter can refer to a 'bigger picture', and our relationship to it: how we drive; deal with the environment; work; play; eat, and so on. Notice how truth, trust, faith, and believe share the same 'field'. Slow to speak brings to mind that aphorism, 'words are cheap'.

Comments

  • edited December 1969
    Buddha proposed an eight fold path to end suffering: Right Understanding, Right Mindedness, Right Speech, Right Action, Right Living, Right Effort, Right Attentiveness, Right Concentration. Now then, how do we know what 'right' is? Who do we ask?

    No one, of course, for only we know the answer true for ourselves. Of course everyone will offer advice on what is 'right' for us. But, curiously, if we closely observe them, we see they have ample difficulty resolving the issue of 'right' in their own lives. In fact, I suspect that all such advice we give others simply mirrors our own life's quest. That's sure true for me!

    So we don't really know what is 'right'. Others don't really know what is 'right'. So, what do we do? I have found that simply slowing down enough to sincerely ask myself the question in [chref=16]stillness[/chref] points me toward an answer matched perfectly to that moment. This is the closest I have come to [chref=21]following the way and the way only[/chref].

    The main trouble we have in knowing what is 'right', is jumping ahead of ourselves, and [chref=8]contending[/chref] with how things are. We simply play one set of desires off against another. We pit our beliefs about what should be against reality - [chref=14]the image that is without substance[/chref]. Thus, in this context, 'right' has no 'wrong'. 'Right' is just [chref=16]returning to our roots[/chref] - to selfless integrity. Only then are we [chref=7]able to accomplish our private ends[/chref].
  • JoeJoe
    edited December 1969
    I find too that when I 'm rushing ahead to find the "answer" for what's right, trying to nail it down, I usually go right out of awareness of the moment and into all my thoughts and analysis. Backing off of the desire to "figure out what's right", helps me slow down, to sense the mystery. What's "right" will come of it's own accord, if I can just get out of the way.
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