The Modern Taoist

Its is NEVER the situation that is the problem

44 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Its is NEVER the situation that is the problem

Descripción

It Is Never the Situation Something goes wrong. And the immediate experience, almost every time, is that the situation is the problem — that the way forward runs through the circumstances changing, and until they do, you're stuck. Taoism has always disagreed with that reading. Not because circumstances don't matter, but because the situation is not where your life is actually happening. Your life is happening in your response to it. And the response — unlike the situation — is something you can actually work with. This episode is about the difference between reaction and response. Why the automatic, feeling-driven reaction is almost always the one that makes things worse. What creates the gap between the two. Why understanding this does nothing on its own, and what actually builds the capacity to use it when the situation is serious enough to matter. Also: a listener question from James in Edinburgh, who has been studying Taoism for two years, understands it completely, and finds it completely inaccessible the moment anything actually goes wrong. It's the question most serious students of this tradition eventually arrive at, and it deserves a real answer.

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episode Its is NEVER the situation that is the problem artwork

Its is NEVER the situation that is the problem

It Is Never the Situation Something goes wrong. And the immediate experience, almost every time, is that the situation is the problem — that the way forward runs through the circumstances changing, and until they do, you're stuck. Taoism has always disagreed with that reading. Not because circumstances don't matter, but because the situation is not where your life is actually happening. Your life is happening in your response to it. And the response — unlike the situation — is something you can actually work with. This episode is about the difference between reaction and response. Why the automatic, feeling-driven reaction is almost always the one that makes things worse. What creates the gap between the two. Why understanding this does nothing on its own, and what actually builds the capacity to use it when the situation is serious enough to matter. Also: a listener question from James in Edinburgh, who has been studying Taoism for two years, understands it completely, and finds it completely inaccessible the moment anything actually goes wrong. It's the question most serious students of this tradition eventually arrive at, and it deserves a real answer.

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