To have no thought and put forth no effort is the first step towards understanding the Tao. To go nowhere and do nothing is the first step towards finding peace in the Tao. To start from no point and follow no road is the first step towards reaching the Tao.
— Chuang Tzu
If there is one book that has survived the vicissitude of my moods and preferences, and has remained beside my bedside more than any other … it is the Tao Te Ching.
While small and fragile looking in appearance, the Tao Te Ching, a book authored by 6th century mystic and sage Lao Tzu, is quite the opposite.
Here we have a mighty book of perennial, undying, simple yet profound, paradoxical, and distilled wisdom that feels like it was forged in the bowels of an ancient mountain.

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And if there was any book – or teaching – I would recommend to new and veteran spiritual folk alike (and even those not of the “spiritual” persuasion), it would be that of the Tao.
Do you need to be a Taoist to appreciate the tremendous beauty of the Tao Te Ching? Absolutely not.
In fact, the Tao is so wild and free that it declares, in the very first sentence, “A way that can be walked is not The Way.” To truly have an embodied understanding of the Tao, we need to loosen and discard of all preconceived labels, ideas, and definitions.
In true Taoist style, I won’t try too hard to go into intense cerebral detail about the Tao in this article. Instead, I’ll keep it simple so that, hopefully, you walk away with something that has touched you on a meaningful, deep level.
Table of contents
What is the Tao?

“The Tao” (pronounced: dow) literally translates to “The Way” and is at the heart of the Tao Te Ching and Taoism as a whole. In the first verse of the Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu describes the Tao in the following way:
Tao is both Named and Nameless
As Nameless, it is the origin of all things
As Named, it is the mother of all things
Such a paradoxical description of the Tao brings to mind the Hindu notion of Atman/Brahman, the Abrahamic religion’s notion of Soul/Spirit, the Buddhist notion of Buddha Nature or Nirvana, and the modern spiritual notion of True Nature.
7 Crucial Spiritual Lessons of the Tao Te Ching

As one of the deepest and oldest spiritual teachings out there, there is so much to learn from the Tao Te Ching. In fact, you could spend your whole life studying it, and still, there would be more to learn – that is the magical dynamism of this spiritual philosophy!

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As such, the lessons below are by no means absolute or complete – they are simply the most obvious (in my opinion and study) and also the most beneficial for our Soul Work as humans:
1. Everything has its yin and yang

All throughout the Tao Te Ching we read about the interplay of opposites. In fact, the whole of this philosophy is really about non-duality: or the innate Oneness of everything.
And yet, despite the fact that everything is interconnected, there are also two sides to everything.
In other words, every person, event, situation, object, and experience in life has a light and dark side. There is expansion and contraction, male and female, love and fear, inside and outside, up and down, good and bad.
As the Tao Te Ching says in verse 58:
Bad fortune, yes––
it rests upon good fortune
Good fortune, yes––
It hides within bad fortune
Despite the apparent duality of opposites in life, they actually combine and require each other’s presence to exist. In this sense, the Tao Te Ching teaches us about the need to embrace all parts of life.
This is what verse 42 says about the dance of non-duality and duality:
The Tao gave birth to One.
The One gave birth to Two.
The Two gave birth to Three.
The Three gave birth to all of creation.
All things carry Yin
yet embrace Yang.
They blend their life breaths
in order to produce harmony.
And in verse 2 Lao Tzu writes:
Life and death are born together
Difficult and easy
Long and short
High and low––
all these exist together
Sound and silence blend as one
Before and after arrive as one
Truly understanding the dance of opposites is a deep form of spiritual integration and is what makes healing practices such as shadow work so powerful.
2. Finding balance is essential

If there is one word that could define the teachings of the Tao Te Ching, it would perhaps be ‘balance.’
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The Tao, or The Way, is the path of the centre, the essence of balance, and if you follow it, your life will be peaceful and harmonious.
If you look at the laws of nature, you will see that they’re all about balance.
Draw out a pendulum forty degrees to the left and it will go forty degrees to the right – but it will eventually settle in the centre. Blend hot and cold water together and you get warm water, the most pleasant for the human body. Eat too much or too little and you get sick, but eat balanced and you feel good. Too much heat will burn the planet, too little heat will create ice – you need a balance of fire and water to have a lush landscape.
As verse 9 of the Tao Te Ching says:
Sharpen a blade too much
and its edge will soon be lost
Fill a house with gold and jade
and no one can protect it
Puff yourself with honor and pride
and no one can save you from a fall
Balance, in all areas of life, is crucial for a life well-lived.
3. Wu wei (effortless action) brings happiness, success, and inner peace

Once you recognize the interplay of opposites inherent in all of existence (including within you) and find the path of balance, you experience what is known in Taoism as wu wei or effortless action.
It takes a lot of effort to hold extremes. For example, too much pushing to “work hard and do it all” creates burnout and a poor quality of life. Too little work creates laziness and lack of progress. Both extremes lead you to failure. A balance of work and rest creates a happy person who is in alignment with the Tao and experiences more moments of flow (or wu wei).
For an internal example, too much rejection of an unhealthy quality within you tends to make that quality to enlarge or intensify, aka. “What you resist, persists” (resulting in anxiety and depression). Too much acceptance of that quality can result in fragile sentimentality, or worse, narcissism. Learning to find balance and neither reject too much or accept too much such a quality (essentially non-attachment) leads to more inner peace.
When we let go of extremes, we find an inner harmony that makes everything we do easier (like a pendulum returning back to center).
As the Tao Te Ching says in verse 77:
The Sage gives
without relying on his own effort
He completes
without waiting for reward
He illumines
without stepping from the shadow
And in verse 63:
Act without acting
Give without givine
Taste without tasting …
Let Tao become all your actions
then your wants will become your treasure
your injury will become your blessing
One of the most direct ways to wu wei is through non-attachment.
4. Non-attachment leads to balance and wu wei

In the words of philosopher Chuang Tzu (369–298 B.C.E.), a prominent figure in Taoist philosophy,
The perfect man employs his mind as a mirror. It grasps nothing, refuses nothing. It receives but does not keep.
These words reflect much of what the Tao Te Ching has to say about the nature of non-attachment.
When we’re non-attached, we’re not disconnected or somehow “above” our thoughts and feelings. Instead, we simply see that they’re impersonal: they’re movements of energy that rise and fall, come and go – the yin and yang of life.

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As such, we can approach life in a lighthearted way that doesn’t cling or grasp onto that which would otherwise create suffering.
In the words of the Tao Te Ching,
“Surrender brings perfection”
The crooked become straight
The empty become full
The worn become new
Have little and gain much
Have much and be confused
So the Sage embraces the One
and becomes a model for the world
Without showing himself, he shines forth
Without promoting himself, he is distinguished
Without claiming reward, he gains endless merit
Without seeking glory, his glory endures
5. The three most valuable qualities: love, moderation, humility

What amazes me about these three qualities that the Tao Te Ching celebrates is that they run pretty much counter to our culture’s values (aka. shame-culture, excessive consumption, and narcissistic self-inflation).
As Lao Tzu writes in verse 67:
I have three treasures that I love and hold dear
the first is love
the second is moderation
the third is humility
With love one is fearless
With moderation one is abundant
With humility one can fill the highest position
Now if one is fearless but has no love
abundant but has no moderation
rises up but has no humility
Surely he is doomed
Over and over again within the Tao Te Ching, the power and virtue of these qualities are exalted. Here we have a crystallized, immediate, and direct way to practice the Tao: by cultivating love, moderation, and humility.
Certainly, such qualities might not be “trendy” or even desirable in the mainstream world of egocentrism, but they are – according to this ancient wisdom text – vital for our joy, abundance, and fulfillment.
6. Be yielding like water

In a sublime “f*ck you” (okay, maybe that’s a little crass!) to cultural values of being “tough” and “strong,” the Tao Te Ching actually celebrates the value of being soft, receptive, and yielding.
Three (of many) passages that highlight this are verse 40:
The movement of Tao is to return
The way of Tao is to yield
… verse 43:
The most yielding thing in the world
will overcome the most rigid
The most empty thing in the world
will overcome the most full
… and verse 8
The best way to live
is to be like water
For water benefits all things
and goes against none of them
It provides for all people
and even cleanses those places
a man is loath to go
In this way it is just like Tao
Building on the idea of love and humility, yielding can be thought of as the path to generating these qualities. When we’re tough and rigid in thought or deed, the flow of Tao can’t enter us: our hearts become closed and we get locked into patterns of mental suffering.
Yielding (or allowing, surrendering, or giving way to life), helps to open us up to compassion, honesty, forgiveness, and other beautiful qualities of the Soul that this world is so in need of.
7. Practice stillness, emptiness, and seeking your treasure within

While the word “meditation” is never explicitly mentioned in the Tao Te Ching, the practice of meditation itself – that is, stilling or emptying the mind – is poetically yet practically discussed all throughout this sacred text.
Take chapter 16 for example, where Lao Tzu writes:
Become totally empty
Quiet the restlessness of the mind
Only then will you witness everything
unfolding from emptiness …
Be still
Stillness reveals the secrets of eternity
Eternity embraces the all-possible
The all-possible leads to a vision of oneness
A vision of oneness brings about universal love
Universal love supports the great truth of Nature
The great truth of Nature is Tao
This verse is perhaps one of my favorites in the whole of the Tao Te Ching simply due to how rhythmically it flows with truth, wisdom, and beauty.
Later on, in verse 26, Lao Tzu writes in a similar rhythmic pattern:
One who seeks his treasure in the outer world
is cut off from his own roots
Without roots, he becomes restless
Being restless, his mind is weak
And with a mind such as this
he loses all command below Heaven
The message here is quite clear: everything you are searching for is found within you. By practicing silence, stillness, and the emptying of your mind and self, you will realize what you already and always have: the Tao.
To go back to verse 1:
A mind free of thought,
merged within itself,
beholds the essence of Tao
A mind filled with thought,
identified with its own perceptions
beholds the mere forms of this world
Further Reading & My Favorite Translation

If you’d love to go a little deeper into Taoist wisdom (which is really quite universal and can be valuable to anyone of any faith persuasion), here are my recommended resources:
- Tao Te Ching translated by Jonathan Star (my favorite translation and the one I’ve used to quote most of this article)
- The Tao of Pooh by Benjamin Hoff – sweet, creative, and a lovely read
- Tao: The Watercourse Way by Alan Watts
- 365 Tao Daily Meditations by Ming-Dao Deng
The above books I either own, have read in part or full, or have listened to. (I also gain a small commission, at no extra cost to you, if you choose to purchase any of these. Thanks if you do!)
***
There is a beautiful simplicity and directness at the heart of the Tao Te Ching which I think is rare in this wordy age where a lot is said about nothing much at all.
I truly hope you’ve benefited from this article, and if you have or would like to share some of your thoughts/perceptions about the Tao, I’d love to hear them below.
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I have been following the two of you for many years and always enjoy visiting your site. Although, like Leonard Cohen, “I have studied deeply in the philosophies and religions, but happiness kept breaking through.” A new set of eyes on old material. makes it new again. Your generosity is huge as I imagine your hearts are.
Today I have been reading about the Tao and. although. I studied. it years ago, in great detail. I love the quotes you shared and the tranquility I felt after reading the article.
The Sephiroth Kaballah Tree of Life can explain verse 42: “The Tao gave birth to One. The One gave birth to Two. The Two gave birth to Three. The Three gave birth to all of creation.” One = the Creator, AÏN SOPH Two = the Divine Feminine, Binah Three = the Divine Masculine, Abba “All things carry Yin yet embrace Yang. [–> because womb-man is all encompasing, the fact exists semantically in the word] They blend their life breaths in order to produce harmony.” The fact of harmony shows that there never existed a “supression of the Divine Feminine” as the New Age clergy used to claim up until 2019. Dr Bruce Lipton’s two concepts of constructive interference and destructive interference explain that any opposite waves that are not of equal power swallow the smaller but afterwards fade and die. Hence the Divine Feminine was always equal to the Divine Masculine. And in verse 2 Lao Tzu writes: “Life and death are born together Difficult and easy Long and short High and low–– all these exist together Sound and silence blend as one Before and after arrive as one” In the Secret of Light Walter Russell explained that Creation in… Read more »
Regarding the paradoxical nature of: “Tao is both Named and Nameless As Nameless, it is the origin of all things As Named, it is the mother of all things” It is not a paradoxical description at all. Reason is that the origin of all things is the Creator who Talmudists call Ein Sof and most mystic schools call “the Is not Is”, and hence nameless. The mother of all things refers to Kali Durga/Aphrodite/Venus/Freya (et al) who is the Mother of half of our double-stranded DNA. The Father for the other half of our DNA is Brahma/JHVH/Zeus/Jupiter/Odin (et al). Freya is also the mother of the Cosmic Monist Matrix of 2019 which replaced Odin’s Dualist Matrix of Yin and Yang which lasted for 25.920 years, a Big Equinox. Obviously Lao Tzu as most if not (today) all ancient power elites are Monists. Since a phenomenon is what it is not Duality was not about the basis of existance, which is a wave and the cancellation of the wave (read The Secret of Light by Walter Russell). Rather the schism between Monism and Dualism found in many easters spiritual/philosophical schools but elsewhere too is/was about Moral Duality vs. Moral Nihilism. Dualists… Read more »
Anything for you guys! I will share away. <3
POWERFUL read. :)
Every word I read in this article is infused with peace, serenity and love. Such a gentle yet profound message, it has left me wanting to learn more. Thank you for sharing this with us all, I have been forever moved by its simple yet all encompassing message.
Beautiful and right to the core, as always. Love.
My favorite translation is by
John C H Wu
I like to see where I can sense / see the Tao in my every day life.
One of the best spiritual source of inspiration available. Love the Tao.
Thank you Lonerwolf.
I have always had Lonerwolf by my side (the last 10 years) And every time I needed help or inspiration I would go onto your website. This year I have lost my spiritual self and becoming very aware of my environment and people and myself which I don’t like.
But today I read the blog. I felt a lot calmer reading about your guidance word being COURAGE and reading about TAO. Many many years ago I brought the TAO (Wayne Dyer) book and I feel in love with it. You reminded me about that book and I felt slightly better about my world. I am going to dig it up again. I am sure it’s somewhere in my house.
Lonerwolf you always come to my support at the right moment in my life.
I love the wonderful way that luna and sol present in such a lovely, artistic and entertaining mode of delivery such important and valuable information that can aid greatly with transportation and integration if digested by the mind and acted upon with authenticity and heart love behind its intentions to become who we truly are in the deepest sense of that word.
I just wanted to say thank you very much to both of you beautiful souls for all the hard work you have put into everything you deliver and do.
Thank you a million times and may peace, love and light shine upon you forever.
Blessings from Gedi