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Daily Discipline

Every 24 Hours,
Begin Again.

Thursday, July 9, 2026
Alcoholics Anonymous

Daily Reflection

Today's reflection from the fellowship.

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Hazelden Betty Ford

Twenty-Four Hours a Day

Thought, meditation, and prayer for the day.

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AA Grapevine

Quote of the Day

A line from the meeting in print.

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Tao Te Ching · Legge translation
Chapter 56

He who knows (the Tao) does not (care to) speak (about it); he who is (ever ready to) speak about it does not know it. He (who knows it) will keep his mouth shut and close the portals (of his nostrils). He will blunt his sharp points and unravel the complications of things; he will attemper his brightness, and bring himself into agreement with the obscurity (of others). This is called 'the Mysterious Agreement.' (Such an one) cannot be treated familiarly or distantly; he is beyond all consideration of profit or injury; of nobility or meanness:--he is the noblest man under heaven.

What it's pointing at

The deepest knowing is quiet—it doesn't need to announce itself or prove itself through words. True understanding comes with restraint: a closing down of the need to broadcast, to sharpen oneself against others, to stand out. Instead, the person who truly knows the Tao softens their edges, smooths their brightness to match the light around them, and finds a mysterious unity with others precisely by releasing the demand to be recognized or superior. This is paradoxical nobility: the highest person is the one who no longer seeks to be seen as high.

Read against today

We live in a time of relentless speaking—a culture of declaration, argument, and the need to be heard and vindicated. Every platform amplifies the voice of whoever shouts loudest about what they know. The Tao Te Ching whispers the opposite: that our compulsion to speak, convince, and establish ourselves through words may be the very thing keeping us from actual understanding. In a world fractured by competing certainties and grievances, this chapter invites us to notice how much suffering comes from the sharpness we carry—the refusal to dim our brightness, to listen, to let go of being right. The noblest act might be the one nobody applauds.

To carry today

Today, notice the impulse to speak, to explain yourself, to prove you know something. Can you let one moment pass where you simply listen instead? Watch how the world changes when you soften the sharp points you carry—your judgments, your corrections—and how much peace lives in the spaces between words.