EPISODE · Jun 12, 2026 · 25 MIN
【Tao Te Ching】 Chapter 3 Part 2|Hollow the Mind, Fill the Core
from Resonance of the Tao: The Road to Awakening · host Voice of Heavenly Tao
Last week, Lao-tzu diagnosed the three symptoms of the outward-grasping heart — competing, stealing, a mind that can't settle. This week, he writes the prescription: "hollow one’s mind and substantiate one’s core; weaken one’s worldly ambition and strengthen one’s essence."Leo and Amy walk all four instructions back into ordinary days. Why a stuffed mind can't even receive a single bite of dinner — and why the Shurangama Sutra says "when the mad mind stops, the very stopping is awakening." The two kinds of inner energy: the balloon that inflates on praise and dies by one pin, and the root Mencius nourished — "supremely great and supremely firm... it fills the space between Heaven and Earth." An elder's graveyard test for whether your core is actually full. The honest workplace question: doesn't the person who stops keeping score just get eaten? (Answer: handle the situation; put down the ledger.)Then the two engines that look identical from the inside — the vow and the contest-born ambition — and the touchstone that tells them apart: remove the others, and see what remains. Zheng Kaofu's bronze inscription. The kite and the tree root. And Jung: "Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes."One question to carry: if the voice that insists on winning fell quiet — what would the rest of you still want to do?
What this episode covers
Last week, Lao-tzu diagnosed the three symptoms of the outward-grasping heart — competing, stealing, a mind that can't settle. This week, he writes the prescription: "hollow one’s mind and substantiate one’s core; weaken one’s worldly ambition and strengthen one’s essence."Leo and Amy walk all four instructions back into ordinary days. Why a stuffed mind can't even receive a single bite of dinner — and why the Shurangama Sutra says "when the mad mind stops, the very stopping is awakening." The two kinds of inner energy: the balloon that inflates on praise and dies by one pin, and the root Mencius nourished — "supremely great and supremely firm... it fills the space between Heaven and Earth." An elder's graveyard test for whether your core is actually full. The honest workplace question: doesn't the person who stops keeping score just get eaten? (Answer: handle the situation; put down the ledger.)Then the two engines that look identical from the inside — the vow and the contest-born ambition — and the touchstone that tells them apart: remove the others, and see what remains. Zheng Kaofu's bronze inscription. The kite and the tree root. And Jung: "Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes."One question to carry: if the voice that insists on winning fell quiet — what would the rest of you still want to do?
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【Tao Te Ching】 Chapter 3 Part 2|Hollow the Mind, Fill the Core
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