Sit

Charles Shereda

Short readings from spiritual texts like the Tao Te Ching, a brief guided meditation, and a sometimes irreverent, sometimes insightful discussion of the text.

  1. 16/05/2017

    Tao Te Ching – Chapter 42, Meditation and Discussion

    Chapter 42 of the Dwight Goddard translation of the Tao Te Ching. 10 minute guided meditation followed by discussion. In today's talk I begin by discussing work, money, their effects on us and on nature, and the conditioned responses that were planted in each of us as children that we didn't get to choose. Meditation gives us the opportunity to notice those conditioned responses. It creates the possibility for choice, even if only briefly. As you strengthen this through a regular sitting practice, you gain more chances to make choices that resonate with your innermost truth, as opposed to acting out rote responses planted in you by others who were themselves acting unconsciously. While assigning and then reaching for a goal with meditation is usually counterproductive, this outcome - noticing your inner truth - is a tangible benefit of sitting that we can look forward to, similar to the way facing our fears regularly can increase our ability to act courageously. I finish with a discussion of Chapter 42. *  *  * 42. The Transformation of Tao Tao produces unity; unity produces duality; duality produces trinity; trinity produces all things. All things bear the negative principle (yin) and embrace the positive principle (yang). Immaterial vitality, the third principle (chi), makes them harmonious. Those things which are detested by the common people, namely to be called orphans, inferiors, and unworthies, are the very things kings and lords take for titles. There are some things which it is a gain to lose, and a loss to gain. I am teaching the same things which are taught by others. But the strong and aggressive: ones do not obtain a natural death (i.e., self-confident teachers do not succeed). I alone expound the basis of the doctrine of the Tao. Intro chime credit: theveryrealhorst, Solfeggio Wind Chimes, MI 528 Hz Single Cut #2, freesound.org Ending credits: jungh001, Early morning Dzanga Sangha national park, Central African Republic, freesound.org

    28 min
  2. 09/05/2017

    Tao Te Ching – Chapter 41, Meditation and Discussion

    Chapter 41 of the Ch'u Ta-Kao translation of the Tao Te Ching. 10 minute guided meditation followed by discussion. Chapter 41 is a beautiful passage and one of the ones that originally attracted me to the Tao Te Ching, primarily because it puzzled me. When I was young it seemed both to not make sense and simultaneously to speak to something deep within me.  In the course of exploring the chapter, I ask the question, If all paths are part of the Tao, then why make an effort to follow the Tao? We finish with a short gratitude practice. *  *  * 41. When the superiour scholar is told of Tao, He works hard to practise it. When the middling scholar is told of Tao, It seems that sometimes he keeps it and sometimes he loses it. When the inferiour scholar is told of Tao, He laughs aloud at it. If it were not laughed at, it would not be sufficient to be Tao. Therefore the proverb says: 'Tao in enlightenment seems obscure; Tao in progress seems regressive; The highest virtue seems like a valley; The purest white seems discoloured; The most magnificent virtue seems insufficient; The solidest virtue seems frail; The simplest nature seems changable; The greatest square has no angles; The largest vessel is never complete; The loudest sound can never be heard; The biggest form cannot be visualised. Tao, while hidden, is nameless.' Yet it is Tao alone that is good at imparting and completing. Intro chime credit: theveryrealhorst, Solfeggio Wind Chimes, MI 528 Hz Single Cut #2, freesound.org Ending credits: aklop, Hornbill flyby, island of Bugala, Uganda, freesound.org

    24 min

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Short readings from spiritual texts like the Tao Te Ching, a brief guided meditation, and a sometimes irreverent, sometimes insightful discussion of the text.