Wu-Wei
Me and Doug were talking about some things online tonight, one of which was this taoist idea of wu-wei, which means “non-doing” but which I have also seen translated as “not forcing.” It’s basically all about attuning yourself with the inner and outer world, so that everything just flows through you, and you’re like a vessel filled with the moment.
But anyway, I found a passage about a certain taoist scholar, Chuang Tzu, who refers to this whole idea as “purposeless wandering” which I find extremely relevant to what this upcoming trip is going to be all about for me.
- Wu-wei also implies action that is spontaneous, natural, and effortless. As with the Tao, this behavior simply flows through us because it is the right action, appropriate to its time and place, and serving the purpose of greater harmony and balance. Chuang Tzu refers to this type of being in the world as flowing, or more poetically (and provocatively), as “purposeless wandering!” How opposite this concept is to some of our most cherished cultural values. To have no purpose is unthinkable and even frightening, certainly anti-social and perhaps pathological in the context of modern day living. And yet it would be difficult to maintain that our current values have promoted harmony and balance, either environmentally or on an individual level.
To allow oneself to “wander without purpose” can be frightening because it challenges some of our most basic assumptions about life, about who we are as humans, and about our role in the world. From a Taoist point of view it is our cherished beliefs - that we exist as separate beings, that we can exercise willful control over all situations, and that our role is to conquer our environment - that lead to a state of disharmony and imbalance. Yet, “the Tao nourishes everything,” Lao Tzu writes. If we can learn to follow the Tao, practicing non-action,” then nothing remains undone. This means trusting our own bodies, our thoughts and emotions, and also believing that the environment will provide support and guidance. Thus the need to develop watchfulness and quietness of mind.
- Dream writing
- Randoms from my desktop
- Reason & The Hidden Will
- King David Learning To Give Up His Own Way
- Prev: Build your own Segway
- Next: Movies are our religion

![[tmbchr]™](/journal/popocculture-blog-logo.jpg)