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Today I started by reading #37 and then Loyce joined me just after she climbed the Sainte-Baume Mountains to view Mary Magdalene. She chose #68, her sister Felicia then joined for #11 and then her daughter, Charente joined for #55. Dr. Rao came on after Loyce as well to share some ideas.



#11

We join spokes together in a wheel,

but it is the center hole

that makes the wagon move.



We shape clay into a pot,

but it is the emptiness inside

that holds whatever we want.



We hammer wood for a house,

but it is the inner space

that makes it livable.



We work with being,

but non-being is what we use



#37

The Tao never does anything,

yet through it all things are done.



If powerful men and women

could venter themselves in it,

the whole world would be transformed

by itself, in its natural rhythms.

People would be content

with their simple, everyday lives,

in harmony, and free of desire.



When there is no desire,

all things are at peace.



#55

He who is in harmony with the Tao

is like a newborn child.

Its bones are soft, its muscles are weak,

but its grip is powerful.

It doesn't know about the union

of male and female,

yet its penis can stand erect,

so intense is its vital power.

It can scream its head off all day,

yet it never becomes hoarse,

so complete is its harmony.



The Master's power is like this.

He lets all things come and go

effortlessly, without desire.

He never expects results;

thus he is never disappointed.

He is never disappointed;

thus his spirit never grows old.



#68

The best athlete

wants his opponent at his best.

The best general

enters the mind of his enemy.

The best businessman

serves the communal good.

The best leader

follows the will of the people.



All of the embody

the virtue of non-competition.

Not that they don't love to compete,

but they do it in the spirit of play.

In this they are like children

and in harmony with the Tao.