Beta
Logo of the podcast Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao

Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao (Marc Mullinax)

Explore every episode of Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao

Dive into the complete episode list for Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

Rows per page:

1–50 of 81

Pub. DateTitleDuration
28 Sep 2023Bonus Episode 04: "Classical Chinese Medicine and Taoism"00:53:56

I am joined at the mic today by Dr. Charles Pannell, a professor in Chinese Medicine practice at the Daoist School of Chinese Medicine in Asheville, NC. (https://daoisttraditions.edu/). Dr. Pannell's bio is here: https://daoisttraditions.edu/our-college/our-faculty-2/.

We talk about the shared worldview of Tao, Taoism, and Classical Chinese Medicine. My great thanks to him!!

26 Jan 2024Verse 39 - Wise-up by Going Low00:39:09

This is one of those several times Tao te Ching slows down, so mayhaps we can hear and get in touch with our original nature, a nature deeply rooted in Earth, soil, clay, mud. We are humus ... humus beings. We stay wise when we stay in touch with our humus/humble origins.

Stan Wilson (https://www.circleofmercy.org/content.cfm?id=149&pid=67) is our reader and questionS-Asker. Thank you.

May your days begin rooted in Earth’s peace,

and grow the fruits of radical hope. --Marc Mullinax

02 Jan 2025Verse 62 "Inner Light"00:29:42

What if there is an inner refuge or sanctuary, one ultimately untouchable by any force you may know?

There is! This refuge is where we have our true identities, our true calling as humans, and our true destiny. This Tao-logic and teaching about our inner light that never goes out ... it neutralizes the cheap, over-loud voices that would tell us anything – ANYthing otherwise. Who tells you who you are?

Getting tired of that voice … that tears you down and declares you hopeless? It is to you I dedicate this episode. -Marc Mullinax

13 Dec 2023Verse 36 - Mating Your Complements00:32:52

This verse teaches an expansive view of how to become an integrated, peaceful being. Instead of hardening one's categories with dualistic absolutes, it is more wholesome to integrate 'apparent opposites' into a unified view, that one is a mixture of what a dualist culture would label good/bad, ugly/beautiful, and so on. It's ONLY when we allow each energy of yin and each energy of yang to co-exist one with the other, we achieve union, unity, and wholeness. Otherwise, we are at war with ourselves.

Tebbe Davis (https://faso.com/artists/tebbedavis.html) lent his wonderful voice to this episode. Thank you.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope!

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax [at] mhu.edu

18 May 2023Bonus Episode 02: Why is Lao Tzu smiling? The power of reframing.00:18:51

In this second bonus episode, I demonstrate how, using free will and awareness, we can reframe, or transform, the crap which we hate, into positive and life-affirming acts of compassion. It is a simple process, this reframing, but few practice it, as we fall into unquestioned habits that transform the goodness of this world into things we think of as evil, or not worthy of our time.


Here is the link for the Three Vinegar Tasters.


May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope! -Marc Mullinax

17 Aug 2023Verse 26 "Temporary Insanity, or the Eternal True Self?"00:36:27

What do we allow to disturb our peace, equilibrium, and equanimity? Verse 26 reminds us that we do - already - before we get into touchy or tough situations - that we are already: grounded, peaceful, balanced.

So why and how do we get off-balance? How do we re-find our balance? This is the teaching of Verse 26. Along the way in this episode, we'll hear from a family deep in this verse's practice, and we'll hear two Buddhist stories on equanimity and peaceful acceptance.

The trailer to my book which my guests shot and produced is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfBhOvSaX6I

Their websites are here:

Mama God book for children: https://www.dearmamagod.com/

Holy Troublemakers book: https://www.holytroublemakers.com/

Watchfire Media site: https://www.watchfire.org/

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories and practices for hope!

Marc Mullinax


26 Jan 2023001 Power for the Peaceful Podcast INTRODUCTION00:35:26

This episode gives some background of the context in which Taoism emerged, and some of the claims, such as Tao being the first philosophical attempt at a "Theory of Everything."

09 Feb 2023003 Dualism's Fantasies00:28:06

This episode treats Verse 2 of Tao te Ching, a verse that seeks to "re-verse" our cultural addictions to binary, this-or-that thinking. In the episode, we learn that this separation of our terms leads to non-curiosity about the amazing diversity of life and energy all around us.

The reference to a history of dualism can be found here: https://iep.utm.edu/dualism-and-mind/#H1

This podcast's central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. 

Thanks to Dr. Amelia H. Wheeler for her voice and question. Artwork by Audrey Davis. The song “Put Your Roots Down” is graciously offered by songwriter and singer Molly Hartwell. The copyright for quotations from Tao Te Ching is held by Fortress Press.

28 Mar 2025Verse 72: "CTRL-ALT-DEL"00:39:20

Verse 72 has been translated several ways through the centuries. We look at these differing translations, and then focus on the power of fear to dampen our experience of Tao’s adjacent, fecund wisdom. We conclude that there is a “right fear” – such as fear of not preventing an injustice – that can influence us to act, and help us to overcome any inertia not to act.

Reminder! Along with Chandler Schroeder, I am beginning a new series of podcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion“ to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

14 Sep 2023Verse 30 - "The Question of War, part 1"00:28:33

Verses 30 this week, and 31 next week, are of a unit, and make the central argument for Taoist anti-war, anti-violence positions. While I am no gatekeeper of Taoist orthodoxy, it is clear that Tao's worldview never promotes or abides by violence or war-like ways, whether these ways are by the state, or in one's own life.

I'll continue this theme in next week's Verse 31 treatment.

Kimberly Gilliam is our voice today.

May you begin your days waging peace, days which become wombs for more peace-waging.

Marc Mullinax, mmullinax@mhu.edu

04 May 2023Episode 014 Verse 1300:26:01

In this Verse 13, Lao Tzu teaches us to mistrust the small mind beliefs about our body, so we can (1) recognize how our ego is at work in order to counteract it, and (2) learn to fall in love with our natural and Tao-birthed bodies, even if we need to fall back in love with them.


This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Mickey Moreno spoke our quotes this time. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

FYI, there are transcripts available for all episodes. Just write and ask for the episodes you want. mmullinax@mhu.edu

27 May 2024Verse 49: “Natural Grace”00:43:35

Today’s verse 49 teaches how to live with natural grace and peace in what seem like pivotal and violent times. We dissect in this episode how the servant leader, or Taoist, holds to their original vision of peace without compromise. It’s a difficult path, but to become adjusted to society’s neuroses and fragmentation into violent factions and self-righteous means to live in knee-jerk reactivity, not in mindful response or engagement with life.

Trent Moore is our valued voice and question-raiser.

May your days begin in peace, to become laboratories for radical hope in this pivotal year.

03 Aug 2023Verse 24 "One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do”00:30:29

Verse 24 starts off with two ludicrous (and unnatural) images: walking on tip-toe and zombie-walking on straddled legs. These introduce four more unnatural, ego-led ways to be in life, like playing to a crowd, crowing one's opinions, elevation of self, and praising the self -- big head, pride, arrogance, boastfulness, egotism. Etc., etc., etc.

Lao-Tzu teaches here how all six are basically the same life-approaches; since each and all try to draw attention to one's self, they are as unnatural as they are toxic. Each has this unfortunate side effect: they render a person UNABLE to see and practice everyday Tao.

But there is good news! Practice trust in and truth with Tao. It is possible to release ego's hold, turn the UNABLED into ENABLED.

Jimmy Knight, a college career advisor, joins me on the episode with great questions and discussions on how this verse applies to students of any age.

May your days begin in peace, and practices for hope.

Marc Mullinax

08 Sep 2024Bonus Episode 06: The Divine Pronouns00:23:34

A theologian I read, Paul Tillich wrote: We must abandon the external high and mighty images in which the theistic God has historically been perceived and replace them with internal depth images of a deity who is not apart from us, but who is the very core and ground of all that is. I invite us to see the entire universe as God’s body. That is, there is nowhere, and no time, where we are not encountering the holy, the divine, that Which IS. Be careful how we interpret the world, for it will become exactly like that.

25 May 2023Episode 16: Verse 15 "WE WERE MADE FOR THIS!"00:14:24

This week, a most revolutionary verse, one that asks us "to checklist" our operating values in life with the most ancient of values and practices of the pre-Taoist masters.

What are these? Care, alertness, being courteous and honorable, fluid, malleable and supple, receptive and open, clear of distractions, and patient.

Meditate on this: When one practices these values, are we not more human??


May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope! -Marc Mullinax

I am looking for future quote readers? Might you be one? mmullinax@mhu.edu.

17 Oct 2024Verse 57: “Politics and Wu-Wei”00:53:47

The personal becomes public in this Verse 57. You who attempt to practice Wu-Wei in your life, or family … what if the government and rulers practiced Wu-Wei as well as you practice? What might happen and not happen in a Wu-Wei-informed government? Whoa!

Stuart Lamkin joins me to discuss this verse. His insights are wise and timely, and the reason why this episode is longer.

May your days begin rooted in spontaneous Peace, so you may know and practice a politics of hope, of which our world is in great need.

24 Aug 2024Verse 54: "Roots, and Fruits"00:28:23

Verse 54 teaches that Tao and its practice are a single events, moment by moment, but we may see them as two phases: (i) Knowing our roots in Tao, and (ii) regarding all through this eternal rootage. This has wonderful implications for the Golden Rule, which I attempt to upgrade as “always do first, as you would be done by.”

May your days begin rooted in Peace, so you may know moment-by-moment how to regard hope in every situation.

Marc Mullinax – mmullinax@mhu.edu

04 Sep 2024Verse 55: "Made for Joy!"00:28:55

Verse 55 speaks about the qualities of a person so rooted in Tao they are spontaneously joyful, artless and not contrived, because conforming with the Changeless Tao is the only enlightened way to live. Teased out in this verse is how we exchange this birthright in Tao with a mess of something we have no business messing in. We have seven voices today, and I hope this is a feast in your ears.

May your days begin rooted in spontaneous joy and Peace, so you may know and practice moment-by-moment hope, of which our world is in great need.

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

14 Jul 2024Verse 52: "Mother & Child Reunion"00:32:42

Verse 52 takes us on a wild but life-affirming ride that Tao is our Grand and Prolific Mother, who invites all her creations – all her children – to a family reunion that never stops. Chandler Schroeder is my accompanying voice this time.

In the episode, I make a new call for listeners to contact me for two reasons: (i) to be a reader and question-asker on a future podcast, and (ii) to join me in a new edition of this podcast after we finish all 81 verses, in a podcast we’ll entitle, “My Favorite Verse of Tao te Ching.”

The email to contact me for either is: mmullinax@mhu.edu.

May your days begin in peace, to become labs and wombs for radical hope.

07 Mar 2025Verse 69: “Befriending the Enemy Within"00:36:30

Today, Verse 69. The centerpiece of today’s verse is captured in a story I tell about being in the presence of the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu. It’s a story that anyone who has an enemy may want to consider. Today’s awesome guest is Chad Smith, and his contact info is here: https://houseofmercyavl.com/connect

Reminder! Along with Chandler Schroeder, I am beginning a new series of podcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

15 Jun 2024Verse 50: "Bait & Switch"00:35:11

This verse gets to the heart of what we are made of, and made for. Origins and Destiny. Often, however, we get trapped by the shiny blings of life and lower our ceilings, and have these vulnerable places I call targets for our temptations. But we are more than enslaved slabs of meat susceptible only to reactive thoughts, acquired tastes and cultivated addictions. Listen for more! Who knows? It’s perhaps my most important episode.
Kenny Meade is our voice and question-raiser. Find out more about him at https://www.kennethmeade.com/.

I make reference to a teaching from J.R.R. Tolkien that parallels today’s episode. You can find that teaching here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtHfY06sP1s

 May your days begin in original peace, and become laboratories for radical hope!

18 Dec 2024Verse 61: Tao's Diplomacy00:44:01

Nature teaches true power, the power of being open, helpful, and that this power is deeper than our egotistical searches for other kinds of power.

As Nina Sabatino, my partner for this verse, said herein, the not-pursing of power can be the beginning of a revolution. The only power of Tao that is real and lasting is the NOT-pursuing power. Be like water, descending low, lower, and then ever lower, like oceans, to receive all, and in your quiet, you help quieten a noisy world.

This is Tao’s Way of diplomacy, a diplomacy of sharing. -Marc Mullinax

30 Mar 2023Episode 010 - Verse 9: Early Retirement00:23:55

Verse 9 of Tao te Ching.

At its core, this verse portrays Taoism’s vision of teaching an individual, a community, or even a civilization, to “let go”. Be careful, this verse advises, in how far one goes, or how widely we extend ourselves, or how deeply we may want to insinuate ego into our lives and projects. By letting go, by “retiring early” in one’s schemes, one returns to one’s natural, spontaneous, originally peaceful state. Holding on to unnatural desires leads only to hopeless gain, and competes with one’s original state of harmony. When I practice the unnatural I not only tip, but also tilt, the harmonic balance that is my natural birthright and gift. This verse asks us why do we do more than we need to do? What would happen if we did only the truly necessary, and no more?


This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Thanks to Wendy Dover for her readings and question. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

Marc - mmullinax@mhu.edu

08 Feb 2025Verse 65: "Return to Wisdom"00:47:09

What a treat this time! I have a local Taoist Reading Club joining me for Verse 65, a community within this magical Christian church in Asheville called “House of Mercy”. We look at a most-timely topic: How government leaders hoodwink the people with confusing, "clever" information that passes for knowledge, and colonizing citizens into settling for less than they actually are.

Also referenced here is a localanti-poverty initiative this church is heavily involved in, called “12 Baskets” in Asheville.

26 Feb 2024Verse 41: Lao Tzu's Smile00:37:55

Verse 41: Lao Tzu’s Smile. Today’s verse 41 is to be taken as a whole; it is an attitude to embrace, to further deepen into Tao. Tao, as we have seen recently, is mysterious, seems to go in reverse, and remain hidden. Verse 41 reminds one how an attitude of expecting the unexpected is one way for Tao to find you. Receptive, open, becoming strange to one’s normal world, to re-engage with Tao’s norms.

There is a picture referenced: The Vinegar Tasters, which can be seen here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinegar_tasters.

May your days begin with peace, and our lives become poetic places for the strange and the true safely to land.

20 Apr 2023Episode 12, Verse 11, "What a Bowl Knows"00:23:42

We have used the word "empty" or "emptiness" in our episodes 107 times already! And here yet another verse on emptiness!

Don't worry, for today, I give the mic over to the players in this verse: "Hub," "Bowl," "House," and "Open Door." (Lots of fun!)

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Ryan Wallace spoke our quotes this time. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

22 Feb 2025Teaser for Podclass: Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion00:06:59

Subscribe for the episodes when they come out at Please subscribe!!

Stay in touch by pressing “Subscribe” at “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” where you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

31 Aug 2023Verse 28: Takes Two Wings to Fly00:34:50

Verse 28 does not mention Yin or Yang, but these two concepts have their fingerprints in every line. It's a verse that teaches to combine the unlikely pairs of seemingly opposites, not just in order to integrate one's psyche with Tao, but also to become a grounded, peaceful, and useful Tao practitioner.

This week's quote reader and question-asker is Dr. Laurel Reinhardt, "a therapist in recovery", whose work can be found at these two sites: www.innerlandscaping.com; and www.etsy.com/shop/innerlandscaping.

May your every day begin in peace, and become that womb or laboratory for the radical hope that those around us (may) need.

-Marc mmullinax@mhu.edu



15 Nov 2024Verse 59: "Soul Force"00:27:31

When did Noah build the Ark, goes the popular wisdom? Before the rain.

Preparation for the days of too much or too less seem to be a good practice. To live as we ought is joy. This Verse 59 talks about how to live so that we, and that which we love, endures. It’s simple: Find your joy, and spread it around.

Thanks to Lauren Lausen for your voice, time, and what you do. May all of us find our days beginning in peace, so that we may deal out from our hands the radical hope our world needs. -Marc Mullinax

23 Mar 2023Episode 009: Verse 8 - "What Would Water Do?"00:24:31

To observe water in all its manifold forms is to study Tao at its most essential. Listening to water sharpens our ears for hearing Tao.

Today's episode departs from the usual teaching, and instead features an "interview" with water. 

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Thanks to Tom Burnet for his voice and question. Audrey Davis is our artist. My brother Ben Mullinax supplied the background water sounds in today’s episode. Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.


08 Jun 2023Episode 018-Verse 17 "It all happens naturally"00:29:42

This verse contains the first of five instances of "Ziran" which are the last two words of this verse, meaning, "It all happens naturally." Other ways to translate Ziran include, include "something that happens by itself constantly," spontaneously self-so, or “It is so by virtue of its own” and “the nature of what is so”.

Ziran is the result of acting silently, without fanfare or drawing ANY attention to self, and practicing the highest virtue - Tao, or, the "greatest thing above or beyond." This practice is the true practice of transparent leaders, parents, neighbors, or colleagues.... Things just seem to happen naturally on their own.

Deborah Lynn gave voice to our quotes this week. Her question stumped me, and so I am asking you listeners to help me answer her.

Audrey Davis is our esteemed artist. Molly Hartwell sings her haunting song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

  • May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope. -Marc Mullinax mmullinax@mhu.edu


02 Mar 2023006 Verse 5 The Function of Emptiness Pt.100:27:29

In this 6th episode, we examine the teachings of Tao te Ching's Verse 5. There are two verses that teach the function of emptiness, this verse 5 and verse 11, which we'll treat in 6 weeks.

There are many images that help us to understand emptiness and its power: a waving flag, a bellows with which to start a fire, and a flute. From each we can learn more about the power of emptiness. Emptiness is not just negation of stuff, but is the source of creativity, art, and compassion. 

Emptiness in this verse becomes paired with "no preference," and along the way I introduce the Chinese character Ren ().

Our reader and question-asker is Julie Tallard Johnson from Wisconsin. You may find out more about this writer, counselor and mentor at https://www.julietallardjohnson.com/.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

Marc

21 Sep 2023Verse 31 - "The Question of War, Pt. 2"00:27:42

Verse 31 is a strong declaration against a Taoist "making peace" with war or aggression.

This is a tough verse, and is easily misunderstood, partly because we tend to normalize our violent ways both within ourselves and in our culture. To be a peace-wager in a society so normalized toward war may mean you are misunderstood, fired from a job, or denounced.

Gabrielle Guiliano - a Taoist practitioner, is our guest voice today. And during the Question time, I ask HER the questions!

10 Dec 2024Verse 60: Easy Does It!00:35:19

Wu-Wei makes another appearance in Verse 60. Herein we discover how Wu-Wei is not a total “non-doing,” but knowing when to retire from doing just enough.

Wu-Wei is not hands off. It’s knowing when to retire your hands-on.
We speak of application to educators, governors, parents, and in this verse, even cooks and chefs!

Chandler Schroeder returns for another round at the mic with his wise and kindling voice.

01 Mar 2025Verse 68: "Heaven? Or Hell?"00:37:37

: This verse 68 is a work-out from verse 67’s three treasures: unconditional mercy, simplicity of wants, and humility. A personoperating from this strong triad of foundational virtues is not lured by the hell of violence, and encourages others to see the heavenly, peaceful way.

Reminder! Along with Chander Schroeder, I ambeginning a new series of podcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

21 Mar 2025Verse 71: “Pretending to Know”00:29:41

Strongly-worded verse this time! Lao Tzu teaches about the subtle conspiracies of ignorance to dumb us down, weigh us down, & bring us down. But who anymore thinks of ignorance is an illness? Verse 71 teaches how Ignorance is not bliss; it is brutal, and can make us into the walking dead.

How to work with or overcome ignorance? We offer several ways to deal with the silent killer disease of ignorance.
If you want my collection of family- or kid-friendly Tao te Ching verses mentioned in this episode, use this email: marc.mullinax@gmail.com.

Reminder! Along with Chandler Schroeder, I am beginning a new series of podcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion“ to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made.

23 Feb 2023005 Verse 4: Hidden Brilliance00:28:26

This episode on Verse 4 of Tao te Ching features the voice and question of Dr. Dan Snyder from Black Mountain, NC. His new and highly-recommended book, Praying in the Dark, can be found here: https://www.amazon.com/Praying-Dark-Spirituality-Nonviolence-Emerging/dp/1666731919. 

Teachings from this Verse include how Tao is, and can be practiced by, (1) emptiness, (2) darkness, (3) potential and womb-like, and (4) hidden and submerged.

Homework today is a suggestion to fast from a habit you choose, and find a counter-activity to offset it.

There is a reference to this Ted-Talk: Anil Seth: Your brain hallucinates your conscious reality - TED. 

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. In addition to Dr. Dan Snyder's voice and question, we thank Audrey Davis for her art. Molly Hartwell for her singing her song “Put Your Roots Down.” The copyright for quotations from Tao Te Ching is held by Fortress Press.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope. 

Next time: Verse Five

12 Oct 2023Verse 33 "The WAY to Endure"00:20:50

Simple, but profound verse. Don't let its simplicity lure you into a false sense of security. For it speaks about how to become wise.

1. Take on wisdom, and leave off ego-managed actions.

2. Understanding self as more important than understanding others (while both are good; one of these is better).

3. Being content with sufficiency - knowing when "enough" IS enough.

4. Regular meditation on death.

I was alone today on the episode. Back next week with a guest!


May your days begin in peace, to become laboratories of radical hope! mmullinax@mhu.edu

06 Apr 2024Verse 44: "Thirst"00:38:02

Taoism joins most faith traditions that cast doubt on the ability of "things" and other items we can hoard (but not use) ... to satisfy our deepest selves.

Rangsey Chang is our voice for quotations and two great questions on the hope and spirituality of the "things" in our lives.

I mentioned a book in the podcast: The Ego Tunnel: the Science of the Mind and the Myth of Self. He gave a TedTalk on his ideas: https://youtu.be/5ZsDDseI5QI.

May your days begin in peace, and become thirstless fields in which we sow the seeds of radical hope.

Marc Mullinax

17 Feb 2025Verse 66: "Upside-Down Leadership"00:19:31

Leadership, whether in nations, schools and homes today is usually of a style that preaches, however subtly, “You need me to save, teach or parent you.” But the truth is that the leader is the paragon of being a follower. So once again, Tao overturns our expectations, turning our norms upside-down, where leadership is following, teaching is a return to being a learner, and parenting is a back and forth dialogue where parent and child each matters.

NEWS!! Chandler Schroeder and I are beginning a new set of podcasts, on religon and how it, or they, get made. Don’t miss the preview trailer or these shows! Stay in touch by pressing “Subscribe” at “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

11 Feb 2024Verse 40: The Rhythm of Return00:23:00

The key Chinese word I refer to often in this episode is "Fan" or 反. "Fan" is the word for "return" or "retire". "Fan" is everywhere in the world's spiritualities, and we explore, through "Fan," how things emerge and grow, and then return or retire to their being No-thing. Being and Non-Being.

While I do not have a reader, I have some singers! Hope you enjoy.

03 Aug 2024Verse 53: "Lowered Ceilings"00:35:29

This verse 53’s episode, on “Lowered Ceilings,” is a call for the inner self not to compromise on the single, or the very few important things in life … like following the level and straight path of the Great Tao, and not becoming side-tracked by the many sideways of fruitless action and thinking over and over again those thoughts that take us nowhere but round and round in circles.

Melvis Madrigal is my second voice on the podcast this week. Thank you, Melvis!

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories for radical hope.

Marc Mullinax – mmullinax@mhu.edu

27 Dec 2023Verse 37: "The Root of Action"00:35:36

Once our ego-stroked schemes calm and quieten, there is Something Else. That Something Else is Tao, Tao at the Root of all. Always been there, always "is" everywhere, always will be there.

When we rest in our roots, the world not only makes better sense, we are also physically, mentally, and psychically healthy.

Verse 37 is a quietly radical teaching verse, a reminder that beneath all noise, commotion, chaos, and other crap, there is another place ... the place we are rooted.

Our reader today is Michelle Miller, whom you can find out more about here: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/259687/michelle-miller/.

May your days begin in peace, and become THE ROOTING OF your radical hope. -Marc - mmullinax (AT) mhu.edu

27 Jul 2023Verse 23 "Trust Falls"00:31:02

What if truth and trust are practices? Practices that take us right into the heart of Tao, and at the same time, the innermost core of who we are. For are not the two the same?

This episode explores how Trust and Truth inter-relate, and how when we practice Trust, we practice the Chinese verb T'ung (同), used 6 times in this verse. Which means something!

T'ung means to align, identify with. Like a musician or an athlete, the practices of alignment and identification with Tao lead us into the wisdom that we, the Universe, and Tao, are each and all made of the same stuff, and by the same spontaneous practices.

Thanks to Susan Carleton for your good work with the quotes and her real-life question!

May your days begin in peace, become wombs for radical hope, and rest in the power and practices of trust.

13 Mar 2025Verse 70: "Hiding in Plain Sight"00:27:04

What’sthe difference between knowing something, and understanding it? Maybe to know something is a mark of achievement and pride we saturate with our words, while to *understand* something or someone is a wordless condition, a state where we are VERY close to our original birthright status in Tao.

I mention in the pod today a daily Buddhist wisdom email I urge you to subscribe to. Here is the link.

Reminder! Along with Chandler Schroeder, I am beginning a new series of podcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” to which you can subscribe now for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

11 May 2023Episode 015 for Verse 1400:26:11

In Verse 14, Lao Tzu re-emphasizes with rather direct energy his past themes of emptiness of mind and senses, in order to gain a renewed emphasis on the PRESENT (rather than a re-tread of the past, or anxiety about a fictional future).

It is indeed possible – right now, and exactly where you are – to live in accord with all creation. For in the now/here/this is all the teaching one needs. Of other teachings one needs little. The peaceful person, or animal, lives in the clear-eyed, clear-eared, and emptiness of no place, and no time, ever in the eternal now.

**The practice of the present is the practice of the infinite.**

Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Wes Own spoke our quotes this time. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

10 May 2024Verse 47: "Spiritual Literacy"00:30:54

The Beatles put this verse into a song, which you can listen to here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swT6YTPYwgM.

Verse 47 has a mystical teaching, one claiming that we can sense the entire universe from our tiny rooms or spaces in which we live. How does one even begin to explain this unitary, unified, worldview where all creation intermixes, interpenetrates, and intermingles in one unified vision or field? So, we talk about developing spiritual literacy.

Thanks to Chris Haynes for his voice and timely question, that links this verse with climate change.

May your days begin in peace and become wombs for radical hope! Marc

25 Oct 2023Bonus Episode 05: "No Thinking Required"00:21:36

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT: As described at the top of this Bonus Episode, the podcast will slow down for the rest of this (2023) year, releasing every SECOND Thursday.

In this Bonus Episode, I look at the poverty of thinking, and the enriching ways we can train the brain not to think, analyze, categorize, and take us places we don't need to go ... ever.

07 Sep 2023Verse 29: Spiritual Arrythmia 00:31:10

With Tao, there is an underlying rhythm, described as right action at the right time and the right place. Get off this rhythm and one starts having strange ideas that one (one's ego) can actually change reality, or improve this rhythm.

Nah.

So this verse investigates spiritual rhythm and spiritual arrhythmia. WE touch on past themes like Yin-Yang and Wu-Wei, but in ways that expand our understanding of these teachings.

Helping me out today is Dr. Serena McMillan, a Hebrew Bible scholar who offers us a relevant (and popular) Hebrew Bible verse, in her own translation!

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories for attainable, radical Balance. -Marc Mullinax -mmullinax@mhu.edu

17 Jan 2025Verse 63: How Things Begin, pt. 100:43:45

This verse 63 will pair up with 64’s themes. (i) Act with simplicity; avoid meddling, so you can align yourself with the natural flow of life.

(ii) Pay attention to beginnings. The small will become large, so address your first steps or beginnings with care and foresight.

And (iii) live with true-true integrity, and focus on matching your actions with situations, and abandon the temporary ways of the ego.

The voices of David and Danai Chaisson feature big on today’s episode. Thank you!

20 Jul 2023Verse 22 “Our fate is a wholeness that never stops”00:30:20

Brian Graves joined me on this podcast, not just as a quote-reader, but as an actual dialog partner during his question about "How does one grade students with a Taoist sensibility?"

Verse 22 is our focus this week. No matter what we may feel, or however we may act, there is NOTHING WE CAN DO to separate from Tao. The Tao teaching here SO different from many religions popular today: whatever partial, weaker, or exhausted aspect of life one feels, these are actually our entry points – our passports – to wholeness and unity. The person who models this wholeness is a force of Nature.

Audrey Davis drew. Molly Hartwell sang. Fortress Press holds the copyright for any use of my Tao Te Ching translation. And without you, where WOULD we be? Thank you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

Marc Mullinax


28 Jun 2024Verse 51: "Nature, Nurtured"00:37:13

Tao is the Original Blueprints of the Universe. Te is the architect that makes these Blueprints visible. Tao is the Dream. Te coaxes the Dream to become deeds. This spontaneous mutual relationship got us here; Verse 51 explores how.

Joe Bennett is our voice and questioner today. Pink Floyd provides some awesome lyrics.

 May your days begin in radical, lettin’-it-be peace, to become wombs and laboratories for the change-up our world so desperately requires.

Did I get Joe's Question right? Let us know: mmullinax@mhu.edu

10 Aug 2023Verse 25 "Our Epic Résumé"00:28:44

Most scholars consider Verse 25 to contain the most important words in the entire Tao Te Ching, for these words give us our place - or as I say it, our "anthropology" in the universe.

And our place is nested in Tao. As this verse concludes: Know your interconnections: Human beings come from Earth, Earth’s patterns entwine with Heaven’s, Heaven roots in Tao, Tao’s blueprint is Nature itself.

Please don't rush over the implications of this conclusion! Here is our quiet confidence that we are already interconnected with Tao. This is our "Epic Résumé".

Huge thanks to David Wollert for his voice and question on sailing (!!).

May your days begin in peace, and be practices for radical hope. -Marc Mullinax (mmullinax@mhu.edu)

02 Feb 2023Episode 002: Awe and Wonder00:29:22

This is an episode devoted to the all-important Verse #1 of Tao te Ching. Its very first out-of-the-block teaching is for us to rely on silence and awe, not words, to discern Tao. 

Chad Holt is our quote reader and question-asker. 

I welcome you to contact me at https://www.marcmullinax.com/. 

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories for radical hope!

22 Jun 2023Episode 020 Verse 19 "We Interrupt this Program"00:28:29

There is a key word in the Chinese version of this text - Chüeh (绝) - that I have come to believe has been under-interpreted. The usual English words used to interpret Chüeh include renounce, abandon, give up, throw away, forget about, banish, get rid of, end, do away with, drop and forswear.

There is a wonderful opportunity to re-read this verse with Chüeh being translated as "interruption". Today's episode is my attempt to strengthen (if possible) the idea of 绝 with what it means to practice a "holy interruption" as a spiritual practice.

The trickster Matt Buys is my quote-reader and question-asker. Audrey Davis is our esteemed artist. Molly Hartwell sings her “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical and "interruptive" hope.

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

21 Apr 2024Verse 45 "The School of Paradox"00:35:25

Much of Tao te Ching teaches us how to hear and experience Tao. To this end, we need to remove our mental interferences and filters that act to weaken or neutralize the experiencing of Tao.

This Verse 45 teaches such removal, by helping us to embrace the Paradoxical and the Ambiguous. We start with the Rolling Stones and end with guest Mattie Miller-Decker's beautifully phrased question on how Taoist paradox and Buddhist Original Mind are complements.

Mattie is at https://www.hidasta.com/.


May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope!


Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

29 Jun 2023Episode 021 Verse 20: Coming to our Senses00:29:06

Here is a verse that seems to be autobiographical. The author gets trapped into webs and narratives of others, and has to hide their true self.

#go.along.to.get.along

When one forgets or compromises one's original self, original virtue, or as the main metaphor for this verse, one's thread to which one holds tightly, all kinds of compromises and "settling" happen.

The solution: Remember your roots. Remember your origins. Come back to your senses.

Missy Harris is our voice and question-asker.

May your days begin in peace, and become the threads with which weave radical hope.

13 Jul 2023Episode 022 Verse 21 "This I Know"00:26:29

If you know something to be true, but is hard to express, like a love relationship, or a spiritual conviction, how do you become *confident* that it is the highest thing to which you can dedicate your life?

This is the question of Verse 21. Lao Tzu answers his own question with an emphasis on practicing TE, or Highest Virtue. This "TE," by the way is the TE in Tao TE Ching, or the Book about The Way of Virtue.

The practice of this Virtue is ever-reinforcing, enabling in one a calm, serene confidence (not certainty) or intuition that there actually is a Tao, and this Tao CAN be cooperated with.

The more we cooperate with Tao, the more confidence we have in Tao's paths and ways as we live them out.

Thanks to Dale Roberts for his voice in this episode, including a rather comprehensive question.

05 Oct 2023Verse 32 "The 6-letter F-Word"00:34:41

Today's verse 32 is great for review. It contains many through-lines of themes we have seen so far in our long march through these 81 verses in Tao Te Ching:

-Inscrutability

-Nothing is alien; all is one

-Forgetfulness

-Three practices of Silence, Darkness, and Emptiness

-The Feminine, and

-Water ...

... Several of which themes re-emerge today. So while there may not be that much "new," the way Lao Tzu frames and phrases this verse will provide necessary reminders about what Tao is, and what Tao is all about.

Darian Smathers joins us today as our quote-reader and question discusser.

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories for the wisdom needed for these days. -mmullinax@mhu.edu

01 Jun 2023Episode 017: Verse 16 - HOW FEAR ENDS00:27:10

Radical emptiness, teaches Taoism, includes the emptying of fears. You know as well as I that life can be a fearful place. Before the ends of our lives, so much will happen that no one could predict. Lots may be asked of us, of our health, by our loved ones. It could be quite easy to hide somewhere we feel we would be impervious to life’s existential challenges, slings and arrows.

VERSE 16 teaches us that a life clinging to false things, ideas, and fears is a diminished life indeed. Rest assured, though: Everything false, from fears to desires, will eventually fail, perhaps slowly, but let this confident mind be in you. Nothing artificial has the power to last forever.

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. David Dixon’s voice uttered our quotes this week. Audrey Davis is our valued artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope!

Marc Mullinax

06 Jul 2023Bonus Episode 03: “The Tao te Ching we almost never knew”00:25:02

We pause every 10 verses to enrich and provide more info than one may find in Tao te Ching text itself. More history, more practices, more background.

This episode covers the kind of embarrassing dilemma we in the West have: Our 100+ versions of Tao te Ching in English are separated from Taoism as it has been generated and practiced by actual Taoists in Taoism's home: China.

Thus, this episode makes a plea for us to become more educated and conversant about an ENTIRE culture, history, and tradition that gave us this one sliver of Taoism - this Tao te Ching text. If you know only Tao te Ching but not Taoism itself as a living culture, this episode introduces Taoism's practices.

I make reference in the episode to (1) my "spiritual terrorism" blog, when Japan weaponized a Taoist practice (http://allkoreaconsidered.blogspot.com/2017/07/spiritual-terrorism.html) and (2) and to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/daoism-religion/)

May your days begin in peace, and become practices with which you weave radical hope, for you, and your communities.

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

10 Jan 2024Verse 38: "Argue for your Limitations, and they’re yours”00:37:01

This LONG verse starts a conversation or teaching about Te (as in Tao TE Ching), a conversation that will run through the rest of the verses in Tao te Ching. Because Tao and Te are separate, but share one root, their message remains consistent: No compromise! The person grounded in the depths of Tao does not drink from second-best opinions. S/He stays centered at the root and lets the unrooted take care of itself. S/He avoids the outer to live in the inner root.

UNC/A philosophy student Ethan Colon delivers the quotes AND, a most decisive and challenging question.

24 Oct 2024Verse 58 "The Light Touch"00:33:39

The Taoist Sage is calm, even in the toughest – or the best – situations life offers. That sage models resilient peace in every situation, not resorting to thought- and conversation-killing cliches or ego maneuvers. That’s why they can join ANYone, ANYwhere, and bring peace, needed help? Why? Their egos are parked!

Thank you Kimberly Mason for your calm presence and help on today’s podcast. I think you will love her wisdom and questions about our verse.

Marc.

30 Apr 2024Verse 46: "Arrhythmia"00:28:41

Knowing when enough is enough is a choice, of quality over quantity, a free determination and conclusion of the wise mind, a free choice made by free persons; “enough” is not an amount or quantity, it is a learned attitude that helps us merge more quickly and easily into the way of the universe.

Eric Cain (https://www.christschool.org/node/290008) is our reader and question-asker.

May your days begin in the awareness of what is Enough, to become wombs for radical sufficiency and gratitude.

Marc Mullinax

16 Mar 2023Episode 008: Verse 7-Endurance Practices00:25:03

In this episode, we get simple ... and ethical.

If Heaven and Earth (or Tao) last forever, how do they do it? (Spoiler alert: They live for others, and not for themselves.) Teased out in this verse is the same question for us. How may we endure? The answer is as simple as it may "seem" difficult to practice, but I make the bold assertion that our endurance and living long is no different from Tao's (after all, Tao birthed us, right?). We endure by finding our fulfillment in the filling and fulfillment of others.

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Thanks to Terri Farless for her voice and question. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell donated her song “Put Your Roots Down”. Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation.

The poem found near the end of the episode is found here: https://www.awakin.org/v2/read/view.php?tid=2613

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

16 Feb 2023Episode 4: Simple Necessities00:30:52

This episode treats Verse 3 in Tao te Ching. Its first theme is simplicity of desire (or craving) that can cause theft, competition, and status-seeking. These cravings we then contrast with honorable yearnings. 

The episode concludes with an analysis of Tao's premier teaching: Wu-Wei, or wise action governed by simple necessities.

Chris Berg from East Flat Rock, NC is our reader and singer(!); he also asks a great thought question on harmony. 

Artwork by Audrey Davis. The song “Put Your Roots Down” is graciously offered by songwriter and singer Molly Hartwell. The copyright for quotations from Tao Te Ching is held by Fortress Press.

If you find this podcast helpful, I would so appreciate your leaving your review on your podcast provider. That will help this podcast find more people like you. Also, if you’d like to be a reader and question asker, hop onto www.marcmullinax.com.

May your days begin in peace, and become laboratories for radical hope.

27 Apr 2023013 Verse 12 "Two Paths You Can Go By"00:23:16

In this episode treating Verse 12 of Tao Te Ching, we are given a choice: To pay attention to our unedited desires and cravings for what Lao Tzu calls the myriad swirl of the 10,000 things. OR, to pay attention, mindfully and with discipline, to the miraculous nature of the present moment, the present time, and the present circumstance. This is how to avoid soul-chaos.


This podcast is an original labor of love, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Madison Thomas spoke our quotes this time. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

05 Feb 2025Verse 64: How Things Begin, Pt. 200:30:04

Today’s verse 64 we return to consider how things begin, and how we can understand wisely how to (i) let them begin and then grow without my meddling, and (ii) how to live attentively to the entire processes range of Tao’s wisdom for living. Chandler Schroeder, who has been on our show twice already, is our voice today.
Today, Chandler and I announced there will be more podcast classes in the near future, in the YouTube channel, “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion”. Hope you can stay tuned!

20 May 2024Verse 48: "Tao Teaches Math"00:37:08

We are taught to add to self to be a self, but where is the wisdom that to increase is really decreasing, and to decrease is actually a positive? It’s here in Taoism, but also in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Orthodox Christianity, to start a list.

I reference a pretty crazy podcast from OnBeing by Krista Tippett: https://onbeing.org/programs/colette-pichon-battle-on-knowing-what-were-called-to/

Thanks so much to Naomi Joy Gill for lending her energy, voice, and – for me – a devastating question (in the good sense!).

May your days begin in emptiness, to become wombs to birth radical hope!

Marc Mullinax

22 Nov 2023Verse 35: The Force IS with You!00:23:47

Nothing -- not time, not distance, not circumstance, not geography -- NOTHING weakens or diminishes Tao's power for peace. If we experience any weakening, diminishing, or forgetfulness of Tao, that's on us, and ways we have constructed our lives through thinking, culture, and habit.

This episode is dedicated to re-understanding and re-discovery (or remembering) Tao in the normal, the everyday, and in the moment.

No reader today; it's a vacation week for many.

06 Apr 2023Episode 011 Verse 10 "Ownership is a Tax"00:22:16

IMAGINE a world without acquisition for ego's sake.

We know how the aim of the unchecked ego is EVER to gain, acquire, and surround itself with trophies of its accomplishments. Can this be reversed? Can we live for others instead of living only to feed our desire for more accomplishments, more acquisitions, more ego-assisted schemes?

The answer is a resounding YES, WE CAN! My translation of this verse aims to show how "taxing" it is to live for, serve, and purchase for only for one's Self. We can "UN-Self".

Here’s an important announcement: Next week, I will have a bonus episode, that addresses some of the main and neglected themes of this Tao Te Ching text. Hopefully it’ll be enriching. The following week, we'll turn to Verse 11.

This podcast is an original labor of love, designed, written, and co-produced by many, whose central idea is that Tao te Ching is good news for today. Tao still speaks. Audrey Davis is our artist. Molly Hartwell sings her song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.

13 Apr 2023Bonus Episode 01: Thingification, or Why Tao still matters00:25:15

This bonus episode treats the myths and narratives of our forgetfulness to live as full humans, alive, and in community with all creation, which is NOT dead.

I treat the myths and narratives given us by Genesis 1, ancient Mesopotamia, Greek philosophy, and the Enlightenment.


May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope!!

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

23 Jan 2023Power for the Peaceful - Trailer00:02:37

This is a trailer for a new podcast on Taoism and Tao te Ching

21 Feb 2025Verse 67: "Simple Gifts"00:31:43

Chandler Schroeder returns as my associate today to help us figure out how the triple treasures of kindness, simplicity, and humility are part of our very being, or as Oko Yono said, “We’ve been filled with great treasure for one purpose: to bespilled.”

For the Buddhist listener, these three treasures are our guides to counter the Three Poisons (Hatred, Greed, and Delusion) you already know about. This verse is a fantastic reminder of who we are.

Reminder! Chander and I are soon beginning a series ofpodcasts called “The Technicolor Dreamcoat of Religion” to which you can subscribe NOW for updates and our first semester of classes on how religions get made. (https://www.youtube.com/@TechnicolorDreamcoatofReligion)

15 Nov 2023Verse 34 "The Deep Embrace of All-Surrounding Grace"00:33:42

Critical teaching here. Tao is already within, working, subtly and invisibly the air all around us, but which we forget we breathe and move in.

Joe Bennett supplies energy and his voice to this episode's effort.

15 Jun 2023Episode 019 - Verse 18 "The Greatest Pretense"00:26:57

Verses 17-19 can be read together, so this week's verse 18 continues some of the themes from last week's episode on Verse 17.

What happens when you start to abandon your original nature and "descend" or move to another beat or drum? According to this teaching, what happens is that we find myriad ways to lose our true self in the cultures around us, that may - and often do - regard us with contempt, or as a potential ATM. We are better than that, this verse reminds us. We are made for much better.

Can we listen?

Stephanie McLeskey gave voice to our quotes and question this week. Audrey Davis is our esteemed artist. Molly Hartwell sings her haunting song, “Put Your Roots Down.” Fortress Press holds the copyright for quotations from my Tao Te Ching translation. Thanks to you for your attendance in this class on Taoism.

May your days begin in peace, and

become wombs for radical hope.

Marc Mullinax - mmullinax@mhu.edu

24 Aug 2023Verse 27 “Wu-Wei, the Great Re-Verser”00:29:31

Verse 27 is full of Wu-Wei insights. Rather than thumb-nailing them here, let's let the Verse speak in its myriad ways.

Audrey Davis, our artist, returns for another appearance with the quotes, and asks about how Taoism might enable us to face our own deaths (We recorded her words in Asheville's Riverside Cemetery).

Mary your days begin in peace, and become wombs for the radical hope growing in you.

Marc

14 Sep 2024Verse 56: ‘Lessons in the Dust’00:28:46

This verse starts off with one of the two most famous proverbs in the Tao te Ching: Those who know do not talk. Those who talk do not know. Talking-up Tao ain’t walking the Tao Path. In the silence, the word-free spaces, are where we then develop the wisdom on how to live wisely, peaceably, and in service to others. Listening more than talking actually gives one cred among people, and the other than human world.

 

Thanks to my quote reader Johnny Richardson, to whom I ask the question this time!

27 Mar 2024Verse 43: Revolutionary Patience00:22:40

We cannot make the entire world into a garden free of hard things. However, we can make our corner of the world a joyful place. There is then, an art to living softly, as soft beings, living patiently. The wisdom of Verse 43's “the soft overcomes the hard” invites us to pause, and reevaluate our cultural notions of strength and power.

May your days begin in peace, to become wombs for radical hope!

Marc Mullinax

09 Mar 2023Episode 007: Verse 6, The Womb00:26:47

There are but 25 Chinese characters in this verse, Tao te Ching's second shortest verse.

Here the amazing teaching about The Feminine Nature of Tao. Until now, Lao Tzu has refrained from any anthropomorphizing of Tao. But in this verse, he links Tao with the Feminine, the Mother, the Womb.

We start off with comparisons in 9 English translations for the Chinese word for woman (牝). Then we explore how deep this Feminine idea goes in Taoism's understanding of creation. Noteworthy is Lao Tzu's use of a feminine image/metaphor to convey this teaching.

Quote by Thomas Cleary, Immortal Sisters: Secrets of Taoist Women. Boston: Tambala Publications, Inc., 1989.

Tao still speaks. Thanks to Nancy Hastings Sehested for her voice and question. Artwork by Audrey Davis. The song “Put Your Roots Down” is graciously donated by songwriter and singer Molly Hartwell. The copyright for quotations from Tao Te Ching is held by Fortress Press.

May your days begin in peace, and become wombs for radical hope.



10 Mar 2024Verse 42: Finally, Yin & Yang!!00:35:48

Verse 42 is the one and only place where Yin and Yang (阴 and 阳) show up in the ENTIRE Tao te Ching. They show up to help us understand the larger creation process (or story, or mythic representation) of how the Universe got here and is sustained, even to this day.

My guest, Rebecca Askew, asks a question about Minimalism, and we discover just how widespread Minimalism is spread across the world's spiritual traditions.

May your days arise (YANG) in peace, and your nights fall (YIN) into radical hope.

Marc Mullinax

Enhance your understanding of Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao with My Podcast Data

At My Podcast Data, we strive to provide in-depth, data-driven insights into the world of podcasts. Whether you're an avid listener, a podcast creator, or a researcher, the detailed statistics and analyses we offer can help you better understand the performance and trends of Power for the Peaceful: A Course in Tao. From episode frequency and shared links to RSS feed health, our goal is to empower you with the knowledge you need to stay informed and make the most of your podcasting experience. Explore more shows and discover the data that drives the podcast industry.
© My Podcast Data