The Way In The Middle

by lech on December 4, 2009

“Holding a cup and overfilling it
Cannot be as good as stopping short
Pounding a blade and sharpening it
Cannot be kept for long”

and

“Therefore the sage:
Eliminates extremes
Eliminates excess…”

Source: Tao Te Ching (translation by Derek Lin) , chapter 9 and 29

It’s funny how much extremes don’t work for us. We cannot bend to any side with impunity — whether it’s an activity, a behavior or a standpoint. At some point there is a price to pay — either we “break” or “become blunt”.

For example, diving into an activity, a “passion” without consideration for all life’s crucial aspects usually brings pain. We have roles to play which require balanced attention — health, family, friends, professional life — private life. We have values which have to work in unison for us to be whole. We have to rest.

To behave in a measured way is a sign of experience and wisdom — if one doesn’t need to express himself loudly, obtrusively, aggressively or by contrast — passively, that person seems complete to us, seems consistent.

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{ 2 comments }

lech December 4, 2009 at 8:11 am

The Way In The Middle http://bit.ly/5KwWP5
This comment was originally posted on Twitter

pmtwit_En December 4, 2009 at 11:39 am

The Way In The Middle: “Holding a cup and overfilling it Cannot be as good as stopping short Pounding a blade a.. http://bit.ly/8wLL66
This comment was originally posted on Twitter

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