The Nothing is Load Bearing | Verse 11 | Tao Te Ching
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概要
In this episode, we dive into one of the most practical and paradoxically profound chapters of the Tao Te Ching: Verse Eleven. We explore Lao Tzu’s fascination with the "nothing" at the center of things—the hole in the wheel, the hollow of a pot, and the space within a room.
Society teaches us to value what is tangible and "full," but this episode challenges that notion, reminding us that while we work with being, it is non-being that we actually use.
The Load-Bearing Nothing: Why the most functional part of a wheel is the part that isn't there.
Playing the Rests: Understanding "negative space" through the lens of music and silence.
The Architecture of Life: A reminder that a house is only livable because of the space inside, not the walls themselves.
Inventory vs. Utility: Moving away from a "full cup" mentality to create capacity for new experiences.
"A life that is all structure and no space — all doing and no room to receive — is like a house with no interior. It looks solid from the outside... but you can’t even live in it yourself."
We join spokes together in a wheel,but it is the center holethat makes the wagon move.
We shape clay into a pot,but it is the emptiness insidethat holds whatever we want.
We hammer wood for a house,but it is the inner spacethat makes it livable.
We work with being,but non-being is what we use.
The "Hollow" Check:Look at your schedule for the day. Is there an intentional gap where you aren't producing or consuming? If your day is 100% "spokes" and 0% "center hole," how is your wagon supposed to move? Find five minutes today to simply be the vessel.
Key Themes & ReflectionsFeatured QuoteThe Verse (Stephen Mitchell)Practical Takeaway