64
The ball that is still is easy to hold.
The game not yet played is easy to win.
The lane not yet used is easy to roll.
The foe not yet braced should be a pushover.
Yet he who strives may split.
He who grasps may gutter.
A bowler often cracks on the verge of a perfect game.
Remember: A roll of sixty feet begins at the spot under one’s toe.
Therefore, make it to the finals before rolling your way into the semis.
Imagine you are bowling while relaxing on your rug.
Knock down the pins before you even let go of the ball.
Take care at the follow-through as you did at the approach.
Then you will really throw rocks tonight!
The Dude desires only not to desire,
Wants only for his rug back,
Remembers little from college,
Yet teaches people how to take it easy.
In helping them conceive,
He helps a whole world gone crazy.
Are you happy, you crazy fuck?
Okay, then.
Mark it zero.
Tao Te Ching: 64
That which is unmoving is easily grasped.
That which has not yet occurred is easily prevented.
That which is infirm is easily overcome.
That which is delicate is easily dismantled.
Deal with a problem before it develops.
Take command of a situation before it spins out of control.
A trunk broader than your embrace
Grows from the slenderest stem.
A tower nine stories high
Ascends from a mere pile of dust.
A journey three hundred miles long
Is launched with a single step.
Struggle with something and you’ll break it.
Grasp too tightly and it will flow through your fingers.
Because sages don’t strive,
They don’t destroy anything.
And because they don’t hold on too hard,
They don’t lose anything either.
Ordinary people often ruin things
Just before they’re about to complete them.
Remain as unattached at the end as you are at the beginning,
And your expectations won’t get the better of you.
Therefore the sage seeks freedom from desire,
And does not prize things that are hard to come by.
In learning how to unlearn his conditionings,
He uncovers treasures that others pass over.
In offering these gifts without pressure,
He helps the world return to its true nature.
Missing verse 5 of Tao de Ching
yes it is missing, but like the sacred rug, we know it still exists, somewhere.