The Ecology of Self-Management – A Taoist Approach
Beyond self-manage, self-cultivate your inner ecology: nourish your Jing (Essence), Qi (Energy), and Shen (Spirit).
Beyond self-manage, self-cultivate your inner ecology: nourish your Jing (Essence), Qi (Energy), and Shen (Spirit).
Stalls and lulls are signs to step back from speeding toward outcomes that may need readjustment, to reassess what’s being overlooked.
Those who anchor us are often unseen. Sometimes, even the anchors need anchoring. Repose is self-healing and nurturing.
The Tao favor rest and renewal. If we don’t move our Qi, we stagnate. If we don’t press Pause, deplete.
Allow the pause that heals.
Our worth is not earned—it’s embedded in our being. Self-worth lives in both doing and being. Define self-worth in your own words; or others will define it for you.
The Tao of letting go — one act a time. Know when to row and when to drift. Letting go isn’t failure. It’s a form of wisdom.