Who thinks his great achievements poor Shall find his vigour long endure. Of greatest fulness, deemed a void, Exhaustion ne'er shall stem the tide. Do thou what's straight still crooked deem; Thy greatest art still stupid seem, And eloquence a stammering scream. Constant action overcomes cold; being still overcomes heat. Purity and stillness give the correct law to all under heaven.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that true strength lies in humility and emptiness, not in claiming greatness. When you stop bragging about your achievements, your real power grows. The chapter invites you to reverse how you see things: what looks crooked is actually straight, what seems foolish contains wisdom, and what appears as nothing is actually full. Stillness and simplicity are not weaknesses—they are the way all things naturally flourish.
Our age drowns in proclamation. Everyone broadcasts their achievements, their intelligence, their moral clarity. We confuse noise with power and busyness with strength. Yet all around us—in fractured families, exhausted bodies, polarized communities—we see the cost of constant action, constant assertion, constant heat. The chapter whispers that what we most need right now is not more words or more proving, but the radical courage to be still, to admit we don't have it all figured out, to let things be crooked and incomplete. In a world that demands we declare ourselves, the Tao asks: what if your greatest strength were admitting your smallness?
Today, notice one place where you are trying to convince someone (including yourself) of your competence or rightness. Can you set it down, just for this day? Let your emptiness be enough. When you feel the urge to explain, to fix, to prove—pause, and be still instead. This is not surrender. It is power resting.