The Coffee Buzz

Brad

The Coffee Buzz Podcast is a small offering in a big ocean of content. Each episode, we spend a few quiet minutes with a verse from the Tao Te Ching, reading it slowly, turning it over, and finding where it shows up in everyday life. No call to action. No social media blitz. Just space to think, and maybe something that helps. Join Brad as he works through all 81 verses at his own pace. New episodes arrive when they arrive.

  1. -2 ДН.

    Can You? | Verse 10 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode of The Coffee Buzz, we take a pause from the usual productivity hacks and fast-paced schedules to sit with Verse 10 of the Tao Te Ching. Unlike many of Lao Tzu’s other passages that make deep, authoritative declarations, Verse 10 is simply a list of six profound questions. We explore what it means to gently coax our wandering minds back to stillness, why there is strength in remaining soft, and how to strip away our assumptions to see the world as it actually is. Finally, we discuss the "supreme virtue" (Te)—how to act, lead, and love with your whole heart while keeping your hands entirely open to the outcome. Pour yourself a cup of coffee, find your chair, and join us for a few quiet minutes of reflection. Key Reflections in This Episode: The Wandering Mind: The vital difference between forcing your mind to be quiet and gently coaxing it home. The Strength of Softness: Why hardening our opinions and our bodies limits our ability to truly connect with others. Cleansing the Vision: Overcoming our "perceptual sets" to see what is actually in front of us without the veil of our own commentary. The Supreme Virtue (Te): How to give birth and nourish, have without possessing, and lead without trying to control. Read Along: Verse 10 (Stephen Mitchell Translation) Can you coax your mind from its wandering and keep to the original oneness?Can you let your body become supple as a newborn child's?Can you cleanse your inner vision until you see nothing but the light?Can you love people and lead them without imposing your will?Can you deal with the most vital matters by letting events take their course?Can you step back from your own mind and thus understand all things? Giving birth and nourishing,having without possessing,acting with no expectations,leading and not trying to control:this is the supreme virtue. Thanks for listening!If you enjoyed this episode, please consider taking a moment to rate and review the podcast. It helps others find this small space for stillness in their day.

    16 мин.
  2. 18 АПР.

    Step Back | Verse 9 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode, we sit down with Verse Nine of the Tao Te Ching. Lao Tzu brings us into the kitchen and the workshop to show us how our obsession with "more"—more coffee in the bowl, more edge on the knife, more security in the bank—actually leads to the very things we’re trying to avoid: a mess, a blunt tool, and a heart that forgot how to unclench. We explore the "gear shift" between doing good work and becoming a prisoner to approval, ending with the seven words that provide a path to true serenity. The Trap of the "Brim": Why filling the bowl to the very top ensures a spill. We discuss the human hunger to maximize every margin and why "more" isn't always "better." The Brittle Edge: A look at the "sharpened knife" metaphor. There is a point where over-preparation and constant refining actually dull the life out of our work and our presence. The Posture of Chasing: Understanding the "clenched heart" that comes from chasing security. Lao Tzu suggests that the search for safety often creates a permanent state of bracing for a future that hasn't happened yet. The Invisible Cell: How caring too deeply about the "committee" of public approval hands over the keys to your interior life. The Six-Word Solution: "Do your work, then step back." Analyzing why completion requires the grace to let go of the outcome. "The bowl doesn't know that it's being maximized. The bowl just spills." "The person who cannot make a decision without first consulting the imagined reactions of people who may not even be paying attention...that person is in a cell." "The stepping back is not absence. It’s completion." Where in your life are you pouring "to the brim," leaving no room for the walk across the kitchen? Is there a conversation or a project you are "over-sharpening" out of a fear of being unfinished? What would it feel like to treat your work like a garden—to plant the seeds fully, and then step back and trust the soil? "Do your work. Then step back." Thank you for listening to The Coffee Buzz. If you enjoyed this meditation on Verse Nine, consider sharing it with someone who needs to hear the reminder to "unclench." Don't forget to subscribe for our weekly reflections on the Tao.

    11 мин.
  3. 11 АПР.

    Water | Verse 8 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode, we explore one of the most enduring metaphors in the Tao Te Ching: the nature of water. Lao Tzu describes water as the "supreme good," not because it is powerful or imposing, but because it nourishes everything without effort and contentedly flows to the low places that others avoid. We dive into why our modern obsession with "moving up" often leaves us exhausted, and how embracing the "downward" nature of water can lead to a more centered and meaningful life. The reflection centers on the six domains Lao Tzu highlights—from how we think and work to how we lead and show up for our families. We discuss the importance of living close to the ground, keeping our thoughts simple, and finding the natural "current" in our work where effort ceases to feel like a struggle. We also take a hard look at the high bar of being completely present in our family lives and why being "water" in a conflict—flowing around obstacles rather than crashing against them—is often more effective than trying to win. We wrap up by examining the exhaustion of constant comparison. Just as a stream doesn’t wish it were a river, we find peace when we stop "pumping water uphill" to meet external expectations. When you are content to be simply yourself, the need for competition disappears, and a genuine, quiet respect from others naturally takes its place. This week, I invite you to consider where you might be fighting your own nature and what it would look feel like to finally stop competing with gravity. Featured Translation: Tao Te Ching by Stephen Mitchell.

    16 мин.
  4. 4 АПР.

    Staying Behind | Verse 7 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode, we sit with Verse Seven of the Tao Te Ching (Stephen Mitchell translation). We explore why the Tao is eternal, the difference between "clean" giving and giving with an agenda, and the counter-intuitive power of "staying behind" to truly get ahead. If you’ve ever felt exhausted by the constant pressure to "build your brand" or "stay competitive," this verse offers a different direction—a leaning toward fulfillment through letting go. 00:00 – Intro: A small pause in your day. 01:15 – Reading of Verse Seven (Stephen Mitchell). 02:30 – Part 1: Outside the drama of arrival and loss. 04:45 – Part 2: "Clean" help vs. help with an agenda. 07:10 – Part 3: The Master stays behind. 09:30 – Part 4: Letting go of the "self" that is exhausting to maintain. 11:15 – Closing Reflection: A practice for your next five minutes. "The Master stays behind; that is why she is ahead. She is detached from all things; that is why she is one with them. Because she has let go of herself, she is perfectly fulfilled." The Eternity of the Tao: By being "never born," the Tao exists outside our human anxiety regarding beginnings and endings. Giving from Fullness: True presence doesn't leave a debt. It doesn't ask anything of the receiver because it has no self-desire to satisfy. The Paradox of Leadership: We are naturally drawn to those who don't push forward, but who are simply there—present and unhurried. The "Exhausting Self": Much of our suffering comes from the effort required to maintain the self that needs to win. Letting go isn't loss; it's ease. Where in your life are you trying to get ahead—and what might open up if you stayed behind instead? Not as a strategy, but as a quiet release of the need to be first. Connect with The Coffee Buzz: Subscribe for morning reflections on the Tao Te Ching. Leave a review on your favorite pod-catcher to help others find their small pause in the day. #TaoTeChing #Stoicism #Mindfulness #TheCoffeeBuzz #LaoTzu #PersonalGrowth #Presence

    11 мин.
  5. 28 МАР.

    The Great Mother | Verse 6 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode, we slow down to examine one of the most evocative passages in the Tao Te Ching. Using the Stephen Mitchell translation, we explore why Lao Tzu chooses the imagery of the "Great Mother" and what it means to possess a source of energy that is simultaneously empty and inexhaustible. The Radical Feminine: A look at why calling the Tao "Mother" was a revolutionary shift in a male-dominated philosophical landscape. Unlike a judge or a ruler, the Mother gives without requiring the recipient to "deserve" the gift first. The Paradox of Emptiness: Redefining "empty" not as depletion (like an empty gas tank), but as the openness of a spring. We discuss how the Tao remains inexhaustible precisely because it doesn't "grip" or try to manage its inventory. The "Always Present" Reality: Challenging the narrative that peace or clarity is a future destination. If the Tao is the source of our aliveness, then we are already standing in the room we’ve been trying to find the door to. An Open Invitation: Analyzing the final, strikingly casual line of the verse: "You can use it any way you want." There are no "approved methods"—only the reality that the source is yours to direct. "The Tao is called the Great Mother:empty yet inexhaustible,it gives birth to infinite worlds. It is always present within you.You can use it any way you want." We often live as if the "important things" are somewhere else—waiting for us after we solve our problems or achieve our goals. Verse Six suggests that the "Great Mother" is the very aliveness within us right now. It isn't a destination; it is the fabric of our existence. What if you have been looking for something you never actually lost? How would your day change if you acted as if you already had everything you needed?

    11 мин.
  6. 28 ФЕВР.

    Not Praising the Worthy | Verse 3 | Tao Te Ching

    In this episode, we sit with Verse Three from the Tao Te Ching and explore what happens when we overestimate greatness, overvalue possessions, and inherit desires that were never really ours. This verse can sound harsh at first, emptying minds, weakening ambition, creating confusion. But beneath the surface, it points to something deeply practical: How much of our striving comes from comparison? How much of what we want has been shaped by what we see others wanting? We reflect on: Why putting others on a pedestal can quietly make us feel smaller How social media and career comparison distort our sense of “enough” The difference between ego-driven ambition and steady inner resolve What it means to “empty the mind and fill the core” How confusion can sometimes be the beginning of real clarity This conversation isn’t about rejecting success or suppressing desire. It’s about gently questioning where our desires came from and whether they still belong to us. Verse Three invites us to step out of borrowed races and return to something steadier. Not what impresses.Not what competes.Not what looks good from the outside. But what feels true from the inside. “You can have resolve without ambition.You can be committed without being competitive.” Where in your life are you measuring yourself against someone else’s highlight reel? What desire might not actually be yours? What would “enough” feel like — not look like? If this episode resonated with you, consider sitting with the verse for a few days instead of moving on quickly. Let it work on you. Until next time… may your mind be empty, and your core be full. ☕

    14 мин.
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The Coffee Buzz Podcast is a small offering in a big ocean of content. Each episode, we spend a few quiet minutes with a verse from the Tao Te Ching, reading it slowly, turning it over, and finding where it shows up in everyday life. No call to action. No social media blitz. Just space to think, and maybe something that helps. Join Brad as he works through all 81 verses at his own pace. New episodes arrive when they arrive.

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