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Francis Pring-Mill's avatar

Thanks for this article. The journey back to our original nature reminds me how the Master in the Tao Te Ching doesn't help us invent anything new. "He simply reminds people of who they have always been" (chapter 64). Sometimes I can use all the reminding I can get!

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Diamond-Michael Scott's avatar

Yes Francis. That’s it! That’s The Way

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Amanda Saint's avatar

This was such a lovely read and reminder. Thank you. If you ever felt like running an I Ching course, I would love to learn it!

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Diamond-Michael Scott's avatar

Duly noted. In the meantime keep an eye out for my Nomadic Journaling program later this month which incorporates some of the I Ching.

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Jackson Houser's avatar

You've shown "The Taoist I Ching", which I haven't yet looked at, and there is the 'standard' I Ching per Confucius, they say (Legge translation, perhaps), of which there is a copy in my library somewhere that I haven't looked at in a long time. I could do my own deep dive, and probably should, but before I break my neck jumping head first into what turns out to be a rock-lined puddle, could you maybe put up an informational guide, like one of those traihead signs that everybody on the group nature walk passes by except for me, leaving the walk leader impatiently conflicted between getting on with the hike and not wanting to interfere with curiosity?

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Diamond-Michael Scott's avatar

I am a huge fan of the “I Ching Cafe.” I highly recommend that you check it out and subscribe.

https://youtu.be/m1E7CsxXSiY?si=9949o949MqHhBBW_

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Amanda Saint's avatar

I will indeed.

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