PDF Summary:Tao Te Ching, by Lao Tzu
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1-Page PDF Summary of Tao Te Ching
Older than any deity, the Tao is the natural order of the universe. It’s the guiding energy that lives within us and connects us to everything around us. Also known as the “Great Mother,” it creates nothing but offers energy to all beings, nurturing and caring for them.
The Tao Te Ching, one of the foundational texts of Taoism, breaks down the nature of the Tao, the power of non-action, and the interconnection between the energies of the universe. The Tao encourages harmonious living through objectivity, observation, and balance.
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Non-Action
While we make things using tangible material, it's often the intangible space within these entities that we use in our daily lives. For example, while a house is made from wood or brick, it’s the empty space on the inside that people utilize for living.
To create usable emptiness in your life, embrace non-action (also known as wu wei, or 无为), or the willingness to remove personal desire and act only when the time is right. This makes you a vessel for the universe to utilize for a greater purpose that you may not understand.
Letting Go of Ambition
To embrace non-action, you must let go of ambition as it blinds you to your surroundings and causes you to act out of personal desire. Compare ambition to a loud noise. If all you can hear is that one loud noise, you’ll miss all of the small, more intricate noises surrounding you. Similarly, if you only focus on your ambition, you’ll miss the more intimate moments that are occurring right in front of you.
Don’t buy into your desires. Remove yourself from earthly ambitions, avoiding selfish or manipulative behavior in the process. This will separate you from those who are too wrapped up in their own perspective to be guided by the world around them.
Excess and External Validation
To embrace non-action, you must also let go of the need for material excess and external validation. If you strive to meet society’s barometers for “success,” it’s easy to become consumed by your desire for status, causing you to make decisions that satiate this desire instead of waiting for the guidance of the Tao.
Society’s barometers for success often relate to wealth and power, both tempting forces. These forces lead to classist and violent societies, both of which run counter to the Tao. For example, if society values wealth, the desire to become wealthy can become greater than the desire to live harmoniously with your surroundings.
Furthermore, the concept of “chasing status” relies on the idea that you need “more” to be happy. The desire for more can destroy you, as obtaining it often requires that you ostracize the people around you. For example, if you chase after money, you may spend less time with your loved ones or friends in an effort to climb the corporate ladder.
Instead of trying to make the world bend to your desires, let go of the concept of “success” and remain internally focused. To eliminate your need for material excess and external validation:
- Take the time to understand your place in the universe instead of investing energy into the demands of others. Understanding others gives you knowledge, but understanding yourself gives you wisdom.
- Don’t dwell on the opinions of other people. Instead, focus on your own journey with the Tao, listening to the universe and engaging with the world as it comes to you.
- Do the earthly work the universe calls you to do, but then walk away from it. If you dwell on it, you’ll become a slave to excess or validation as you’ll become engrossed with the material rewards of your earthly work. When you realize that the universe has given you everything that you need, you’ll feel content.
Earthly pleasures and “success” may provide distraction through enjoyment, but the Tao, though seemingly mundane, provides true fulfillment.
Patience
A final element of embracing non-action is being patient and allowing the Tao to guide your behavior. You can’t seek out the “right time” to act as this will inherently put your personal desires into your decisions.
Instead, you must wait for the moment to come to you, thus allowing you to interact with the world based on how it actually is instead of how you want it to be. If you’re searching for fulfillment in earthly desires, you’ll never be truly patient and observant because you’ll try to force things to happen before the universe is ready.
For example, if you want a promotion at work, you may try to take action to “prove yourself” to your boss. This action comes from a personal desire for external validation. While chasing this promotion, you’d likely become so focused on your task that you’d miss the opportunities that would’ve naturally arisen had you been patient enough to wait for the universe’s guidance.
Though you will spend most of your time waiting for the Tao’s guidance, when you do feel moved by the Tao, allow yourself to feel its impact completely. You may not fully understand why you’re feeling what you’re feeling, but this shouldn’t prevent you from fully embracing your emotions. For example, if you feel the sudden urge to cry, allow yourself to cry. If you feel the sudden urge to laugh, allow yourself to laugh.
This helps you accept what the universe gives you, even in moments of loss or sorrow. For example, if a loved one passes away, you may feel extreme sorrow. In that moment, allow yourself to grieve. However, once the emotion begins to fade, don’t allow yourself to hold on to it. Let it go and re-engage with the workings of the Tao.
Harmonious Living
To achieve harmony, understand your place in the world and work to fulfill the function the universe requires of you—nothing more, nothing less. Contrary to popular belief, you can’t improve the world. It's sacred, and, if you try to change it, you’ll lose touch with it. Instead, focus on what the universe requires of you, and you’ll find peace within your existence.
Corruption
When the world is in harmony with the Tao, life can flourish. However, when humanity works against the Tao, the world becomes corrupted.
(Shortform example: If humanity was willing to live within the guidance of the Tao, only taking what we needed to survive, we could co-exist with the animals of the world. However, because of mankind’s need to industrialize, many species have either gone extinct due to pollution or have become a part of the ever-growing meat industry, thus corrupting the natural order of the Tao.)
Instead of succumbing to corrupting forces, approach the world with compassion and empathy. Listen to the guidance of the Tao, finding your place within the world instead of trying to rule over it.
Leadership
In order to promote harmonious living on a larger scale, leaders must embrace the teachings of the Tao. If a leader doesn’t live according to the Tao, their disconnection from the universe will likely be shared by those who follow them.
To be a harmonious leader, don’t try to control the people you lead. Ultimately, leadership requires trust. Trust generates more honesty and respect amongst the people you lead. If you don’t trust your people, you create the potential for conflict as you tell your people that they aren’t trustworthy or respected.
When issues arise, you must trust that your people will do the right thing. You may be tempted to take control of the situation through regulation and restriction. However, though it sounds counterintuitive, the more that you try to restrict the people under your leadership, the less control you actually have. This is because strict regulation implies that you don’t have faith in your people, setting the stage for further internal conflict.
Guiding Others to the Tao
If you lead through the Tao, others will be drawn to you and will ask for guidance, especially other leaders. When someone comes to you for advice or help, don’t offer your money or wisdom. Instead, offer to teach them the ways of the Tao, as it is forgiving and allows for growth. You can help them gain earthly power through your wisdom, but you’ll help them find a universal power within the Tao.
Action Over Words
Leadership should rely more on action than words. In fact, the greatest leaders are able to generate large-group cooperation without ever having to say a word.
(Shortform example: A politician who assists in the creation of community kitchens to combat hunger will likely be more respected than the politician who makes speeches about hunger but never takes action to fix it. Furthermore, while the community will be able to directly support a community kitchen, they can’t take cooperative action based upon empty words.)
Note: taking action does not equate to using force or violence. Even when people challenge you or resist your guidance, avoid using violence at all costs. Violence will only make you seem unstable or desperate. Instead, adapt to the flow of the world around you, embracing that many of the workings of the universe are outside of your control.
Moderation
Lead through moderation, not extreme ideals. Moderation stems from objectivity. By removing personal bias, you can make temperate, wise decisions based on the guidance of the Tao. Conversely, if your choices are driven by ambition or personal desire, you’re more prone to make extreme or one-sided decisions driven by emotion.
To maintain moderation, never use “goodness” as a platform for your leadership. As you learned earlier, if you introduce the concept of “good,” you also create the concept of “evil.” If you try to convince your people of the “goodness” of one side, you’re inherently placing your personal biases onto your actions and setting the stage for an opposing force to arise. Lead through observation and adaptability instead of ideals, and “evil” will disappear.
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Here's a preview of the rest of Shortform's Tao Te Ching PDF summary:
PDF Summary Shortform Introduction
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This summary breaks down the text as follows:
- Introduction: the concept of the Tao and the nature of its power
- Sections 1 and 2: engaging with the Tao
- Section 3: the benefits of the Tao from a personal and leadership perspective
PDF Summary Introduction: The Nature of the Tao
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Before you begin your journey with the Tao, embrace your inability to comprehend its nature. Instead, look for the manifestations of the Tao, using them as a reminder of the Great Mother’s power. For example, if you feel a sense of peace while looking at a gorgeous sunset, recognize that the sensation of enjoying the sunset is a manifestation of the workings of the Tao.
Engaging With the Tao
The Tao (and the universe) works in inexplicable ways, and, while you’ll never completely understand it, you can engage with the energy it creates. There are three major aspects to engaging with the Tao:
- Simplicity: Keep your thoughts and actions simple. This lets you stay engaged with the universe.
- Patience: Be patient with friends and foes alike. This lets you stay objective with your observations.
- Compassion: Be compassionate to yourself and others. This lets you respect all beings regardless of your biases.
You’ll learn more about engaging with the Tao in sections one and two.
Enlightened people embrace the teachings of the Tao, while foolish people laugh it off as nonsense. The workings of the Tao aren’t readily apparent to most people, and those who...
PDF Summary Section 1: Objectivity and Balance
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Yin and Yang
To achieve harmony with the Tao, you must balance yin, or 阴 (darkness, assertiveness) with yang, or 阳 (lightness, humility). If you tend to use one more than the other, you risk throwing yourself out of balance, disconnecting yourself from the Tao in the process.
Positive Emotions
Most people can’t recognize true positive emotions because what they’re feeling doesn’t fit society’s preconceived notion of what that emotion should look like. Rather than embracing the positive emotions that they’re objectively feeling, they contort their view of positivity to fit society’s standards.
(Shortform example: Many people associate success with money and fame. Therefore, if someone feels as though they’re successful in their life but doesn’t show any of the “normal” signs of success, they may second guess their feelings of joy or contentment because they don’t fit society’s criteria for success.)
The rejection of positivity is often a result of fear. Fear is an illusion that leads to destruction and anxiety. It works counter to the Tao as it tries to assert its control over the world instead of living harmoniously with it.
Don’t let your...
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Learn more about our summaries →PDF Summary Section 2: Non-Action
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The Tao is available to every being in the universe because it attaches no ambition or desire to the energy it generates. Therefore, it has no ulterior motive behind the offering of its power and wisdom. Likewise, when you detach yourself from personal desire, you can selflessly offer your energy to the beings and things around you without limitation. This allows you to live harmoniously with your surroundings, feeling fulfillment while staying rooted in the Tao.
Remove yourself from earthly ambitions, avoiding selfish or manipulative behavior in the process. This will separate you from those who are too wrapped up in their own perspective to be guided by the world around them.
Excess and External Validation
To embrace non-action, you must also let go of the need for material excess and external validation. If you strive to meet society’s barometers for “success,” it’s easy to become consumed by your desire for status, causing you to make decisions that satiate this desire instead of waiting for the guidance of the Tao.
Society’s barometers for success often relate to wealth and power, both tempting forces. These forces lead to classist and violent...
PDF Summary Section 3: Harmonious Living
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Violence should only be used in the most extreme of circumstances. If you must resort to violence, it should pain you to do so. Even if you’re victorious, you should be upset by the fact that you had to use aggression.
Leadership
In order to promote harmonious living on a larger scale, leaders must embrace the teachings of the Tao. If a leader doesn’t live according to the Tao, their disconnection from the universe will likely be shared by those who follow them.
To be a harmonious leader, don’t try to control the people you lead. Ultimately, leadership requires trust. Trust generates more honesty and respect amongst the people you lead. If you don’t trust your people, you create the potential for conflict as you tell your people that they aren’t trustworthy or respected.
When issues arise, you must trust that your people will do the right thing. You may be tempted to take control of the situation through regulation and restriction. However, though it sounds counterintuitive, the more that you try to restrict the people under your leadership, the less control you actually have. This is because strict regulation implies that you don’t have faith in your...
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