The Tao of Birth Days. Denny Sargent

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The Tao of Birth Days - Denny Sargent

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The second title of each hexagram is more in tune with people and personality traits. Each one is crafted by me, but many are influenced by new translation work, especially the new edition of the I Ching by Rudolph Ritsema and Stephen Karcher (Barnes & Noble Books).

      The only other I Ching edition that I recommend one hundred percent is that by R. L.Wing (Doubleday and Co.). This is probably the best and most practical modern translation available.

      There are numerous translations of the Tao Teh Ching available. I have several that I like, but feel free to choose your own—just be sure you get one of them!

      Change is the only constant. Enjoy!

      —Denny Sargent

      Introduction

      Since I was a child and became fascinated with ancient cultures, I have sought after myths, legends, and oracles that would help explain the world to me. I have been fascinated, amazed, and constantly involved with studying and using the I Ching for over twenty-five years and I still feel that I have barely scratched the surface! I decided to write this book simply because I could not find anything like it. Before we get to the actual text, and before you delve into what your personal hexagram is, let me give a bit of background on both the I Ching and natal hexagrams.

      History of the I Ching

      The I Ching is very likely the oldest book ever written. The actual texts were said to have been written by a legendary emperor of China (Fu Hsi) who existed in prehistory some three to four thousand years ago. Fragments of I Ching symbols (trigrams and hexagrams) have been discovered carved on bones that have been carbon-dated even older than this. It is clear, then, that the I Ching is one of the oldest spiritual and divination systems in the world, if not the oldest. The texts that make up the book called I Ching, as we now know them, were written down and annotated by King Wen (translated as “King Writing” or “King Pattern”), the founder of the Chou dynasty, about 1000 B.C.E. He had plenty of time to do this, as he was held captive by an enemy, the tyrant Chou Hsin, for many years. It was King Wen who organized the eight trigrams and the resulting sixty-four hexagrams (more on these later). These symbols and the writings he added roughly resulted in the system we have today.

      By the end of the “Warring States Period,” about 200 B.C.E., the practice of “throwing yarrow sticks” and actually consulting the “official” I Ching was more or less established. The very old primary mode of consulting the spirits had previously centered around touching a hot poker to a tortoiseshell and then reading the cracks that occurred. A legend that ties this together tells of the demigod Fu Hsi contemplating a tortoiseshell one day and seeing in its eight-sectioned back the lines of the eight primal trigrams. What gave form to this mass of visionary information—something we cannot avoid discussing—is the root religion/ philosophy called Taoism.

      The Tao and Taoism

      Taoism, the root-philosophy of all Asia is extremely easy to embrace once one has delved into it, and yet it is also one of the most difficult things to do! The basis of Taoism is essentially “letting go,” a real stretch for most Westerners. Here, then, in a few words, is the paradox of Taoism. Essentially, Taoism is based on the Tao Teh Ching, a very slim book of eighty-one short passages written (or dictated) by Lao Tzu, a semimythological Chinese sage who lived, it is said, around 2,500 years ago. Here are some bits and pieces from the Tao Teh Ching:

      The unnamable is the eternally real...

      The Tao is like a well; used but never used up

      It is like the eternal void: filled with infinite possibilities ...

      The Tao is infinite, eternal.

      Why is it eternal? It was never born;

      Thus it can never die ...

      Open yourself to the Tao, then trust your natural responses;

      This earlier, open-minded, nature-based philosophy imbues and binds the I Ching together, pervading it with cosmic humor and flashes of insight that are far from rational or earthly. It is important to appreciate this spirit of detachment. This is a mysticism that is so basic to Eastern philosophies and spirituality that in order to work with the I Ching in any meaningful way it needs to be understood. Why? Because the I Ching is not a fortune-telling device, nor is it a predictor of the future or a therapeutic device, at least in the Western sense, at least as far as I understand it. To a Taoist, accurately predicting the future is rather beside the point. One should be in the present; that is the goal of living and being. The I Ching was created to help people understand the flow of reality (Tao) about them, to better “go with the flow” to live a real life.

      This brings us to the huge subject we have not mentioned, the most important point yet, to wit: What exactly is the I Ching?

      The System of the I Ching

      In short, in common vulgar slang, the I Ching could be considered the “Book of Shit Happens!” This gets the flavor across rather crudely but pretty clearly.

      Now that we have more or less presented the philosophical and magical underpinnings of the I Ching, let’s briefly back up and look at its structure.

      The Tao is beyond, through, existent in/about/as all reality (and not-reality). It is formless, nameless, beyond all conception, thought, or concept. You probably got this by now. So much for that.

      In manifesting the unity of Tao comes to be as duality, Yin and Yang. This Yin/Yang is called Tai Chi. It is a symbol that is roundly misunderstood and replicated by New Agers and all sorts of other people. The Yin/Yang is a symbol that is made of two areas flowing together: Yin (dark) and Yang (light). Originally, this concept was illustrated using the image of the shadow side of a mountain and the lit-up side of a mountain. This goes far to explaining the idea better than negative and positive, unless one thinks of a magnet. In this sense, we can grasp the idea that all things have two poles, two aspects, two sides, two energies, and all things and people are a combination of these two forces, always changing, always flowing, always dancing in the eternal flow of matter and energy.

      All

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