In the highest antiquity, (the people) did not know that there were (their rulers). In the next age they loved them and praised them. In the next they feared them; in the next they despised them. Thus it was that when faith (in the Tao) was deficient (in the rulers) a want of faith in them ensued (in the people). How irresolute did those (earliest rulers) appear, showing (by their reticence) the importance which they set upon their words! Their work was done and their undertakings were successful, while the people all said, 'We are as we are, of ourselves!'
The chapter traces a decline in human society linked to the quality of leadership and trust. When rulers embody the Tao quietly—accomplishing much through non-interference—people attribute their wellbeing to themselves and remain naturally content. As rulers grow more visible, demanding, and separated from the Tao, people lose faith in them and in themselves. The teaching: true influence flows from humble presence, not assertion. When we try to be seen and credited, we create the very doubt and resistance we fear.
We live in an age of constant visibility and demand—leaders, experts, ideologues all competing for our attention and allegiance, each claiming the answer. The noise creates exactly what the chapter warns: widespread distrust not just in institutions but in our own capacity to know what is true. We have forgotten what it feels like to be led so gently we barely notice it, to accomplish things together without needing credit or explanation. The chapter whispers that our divisions may stem not from evil intent but from the simple absence of humility in those who speak loudest—and from our own hunger to be told what to do rather than trusted to find our way.
Today, notice where you are trying to be seen or understood, and experiment with stepping back just slightly. Notice too where you're reaching for someone else's certainty instead of trusting your own quiet knowing. The Tao doesn't announce itself; it works best when you forget to ask who did it.