Today: “You may act on your enthusiasm now.  Do not wait for someone else to remind you. Use your intuition.” – From the I Ching

You may act on your enthusiasm now.  Do not wait for someone else to remind you. Use your intuition.

There is a rhythmic force, a world music, that lives deep in the Unconscious of each of us.
It’s a primitive drumbeat, a shaking rattle, a tribal chant that invokes the primal self to rise up and join the dance.
This is the enthusiasm that is generated now.
Not rhetorical persuasion, not a play on the emotions, but a charismatic, irresistible Call of the Wild.

You wait for a compelling signal, yet ignore the knock at the gate.
Missed opportunity breeds regret.
Enthusiasm that looks upward creates remorse.
Hesitation brings remorse.

Endurance is the key to success in this situation.
However, durability is not synonymous with stone-like rigidity.
True resilience requires a flexibility that allows adaptation to any adverse condition, while still remaining true to the core.

Tao Te Ching – Verse 50 – The Master gives himself up to whatever the moment brings

Today: “Flexibility is a law of life. In our common language we call it compassion.” Yogi Bhajan

Today: “Flexibility is a law of life. In our common language we call it compassion.” Yogi Bhajan

Practice this:

Meditation: NM091 – 19921110 – Self Emboldenment, Engagement, Vision

Meditation: NM0394 – Live Above Denial

 

Meditation: NM038 – “To Have a Happy Body Increase Vitality, Release Pressure in Body, Balance Endocrines”

Previous reading: “A person given authority by the leader MUST expand his awareness as his influence increases. Watch what he does rather than what he says. As obstacles arise, compromise MUST be sought in earnest. helper MUST NOT simply be a tool.”

Previous  previous reading: “Those you have served will want to repay you. Those who have caused you harm through their own negligence or delusion will suffer consequences of their own doing. Strive with them with common cause to make things right.”

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See Richard Wilhelm's translation for this reading from the original text
16 – Sixteen.  Yü / Enthusiasm

Thunder comes resounding out of the Earth:
Similar thunder roars up from the masses when the Superior Person strikes a chord in their hearts.

Whip up enthusiasm, rally your forces, and move boldly forward.

SITUATION ANALYSIS:

There is a rhythmic force, a world music, that lives deep in the Unconscious of each of us.
It’s a primitive drumbeat, a shaking rattle, a tribal chant that invokes the primal self to rise up and join the dance.
This is the enthusiasm that is generated now.
Not rhetorical persuasion, not a play on the emotions, but a charismatic, irresistible Call of the Wild.
Confucius said that the person who could comprehend this could ‘rule the world as though it were spinning in his hand.’
This is a time for instinct, not intellect — the Thunder from the Beneath.

Six in the third place means:

You wait for a compelling signal, yet ignore the knock at the gate.
Missed opportunity breeds regret.

Enthusiasm that looks upward creates remorse.
Hesitation brings remorse.

This line is the opposite of the preceding one: the latter bespeaks self-reliance, while here there is enthusiastic looking up to a leader. If a man hesitates too long, this also will bring remorse. The right moment for approach must be seized: only then will he do the right thing.

32 – Thirty-Two.  Hêng / Durability

Arousing Thunder and penetrating Wind.
Close companions in any storm:
The Superior Person possesses a resiliency and durability that lets him remain firmly and faithfully on course.

Such constancy deserves success.

SITUATION ANALYSIS:

Endurance is the key to success in this situation.
However, durability is not synonymous with stone-like rigidity.
True resilience requires a flexibility that allows adaptation to any adverse condition, while still remaining true to the core.
Can you maintain your integrity under any circumstance?
Can you influence the situation without giving opposing forces anything to resist?
Then you will endure to reach your goal.

Today: “Flexibility is a law of life. In our common language we call it compassion.” Yogi Bhajan

“Flexibility is a law of life. In our common language we call it compassion.” Yogi Bhajan

Meditation: Milarepa’s Song to Lady Palderboom

What else Yogi Bhajan said

Tao Te Ching – Verse 50 – The Master gives himself up to whatever the moment brings

Tao Te Ching – Verse 50

The Master gives himself up
to whatever the moment brings.
He knows that he is going to die,
and he has nothing left to hold on to:
no illusions in his mind,
no resistances in his body.
He doesn’t think about his actions;
they flow from the core of his being.
He holds nothing back from life;
therefore he is ready for death,
as a man is ready for sleep
after a good day’s work. Continue reading “Tao Te Ching – Verse 50 – The Master gives himself up to whatever the moment brings”