dissent
No one is a supreme authority. People seek leaders, priests, gurus,
and hermits thinking that someone has a precise formula for living correctly.
No one does. No one can know you as well as you can know yourself.
All that you can gain from a wise person is the assurance of some initial
guidance. You may even spend decades studying under such an extraordinary
person, but you should never surrender your dignity, independence, and
personality.
There is no single way to do things in life. There are valid paths,
even though they may differ from the ways of respected elders. Diversity
is good for tradition. Too often, elders confuse dissent with disloyalty
and punish people for the crime of having a different view. They
are no longer in touch with Tao but instead mouth self-serving convention.
Perhaps the panic of their own impending death makes them clutch.
When the leaders become repressive, it is a sign that their time is drawing
to a close.
A saying about old masters was that they were like steel wrapped in
cotton: They appeared soft on the outside but still held great power on
the inside. We all hope for elders like that. But oftentimes,
the old masters have lost their mandate of Tao. Then, when tested,
they are merely brittle bone and fat. How can respect such people?
dissent
duckdaotsu receives no compensation
this is one of my favorites that sits in my desktop folder,
waiting to surprise me with one of 50 or so picture that I have grown to
love over the last year or so. It is from the Peasant Painting group.
Old man:
Dissent is not disloyalty.
Be careful before you retaliate.
Your steel wrapped in cotton
May only be brittle bone wrapped in fat.
365 Tao
Deng Ming-Dao
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