
The yellow color is the water reflecting sunlight from bright yellow leaves above.
This photograph reflects an abiding truth of life: Luck--also called "Grace"--is the foundation of life. An hour earlier or later and this photo isn't there. Every photograph is like that, we walk into a scene with a camera and greet what greets us there as a sheer coincidence of grace/luck and timing. In five minutes the tourists will descend, or the wind will pick up/die down, or the light will change... Our life hangs by a thread all the time. What are the chances that we are here/now/as we are? Who would have bet on it at our birth, or ten years ago? Yet, here we are. Who would have guessed it? There is no way of mastering the art of luck/grace beyond the old saying attributed to about 600 people: "The harder I work/practice, the luckier I get." This holds up over time regardless of the work/practice. The old Taoists and the older yogis before them, and who knows before them, relished knowing that it is all luck, and the harder we work/practice, the luckier we are. The catch is that we can't be lucky/graced the way we want to be lucky/graced. Luck happens all the time but it happens in its own time, in its own way. The Tao is just that way. Tao is another word for luck/grace. Those who are aligned with, in sync with, the Tao are luckier than those who are not. But, they aren't able to predict or determine the nature of the luck that guides their way through their life. It's all a matter of chance, of luck, of coincidence, of synchronicity (Which is a term coined by Carl Jung meaning "fortuitous coincidence," since some coincidences are not apparently fortuitous). Living in accord with the Tao positions ourselves to be lucky in ways that do not seem to be lucky at the time, but turn out to be amazingly fortuitous over time, which makes "synchronicity" meaningless, in that who is to say what is fortuitous and what is not? Everything is only apparently fortuitous or disastrous depending on how things seem to be at the time that judgment is made, but, remember, the worst things that happen to us can turn out to be the best things that happen to us over time, and vice versa. So when do we say, "Lucky!" "Unlucky!"? We just keep living in sync with the Tao and let our outcomes be our outcomes, knowing that nothing is ever over and all of our outcomes are even now becoming other outcomes, and will spin out on and on forever. All we have to focus on is living in accord with the Tao, and letting things happen as they will, trusting that the more successfully we do that, the luckier we will be.
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Thanks for the photo and the explanation. I was stumped. Thanks also for your words this morning. Ain’t it the truth? You just never know.
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Knowing that we don’t know what we think we know, or even have a clue, helps with being aligned with the Tao. Jesus knew that, and said, “The Spirit is like the wind that blows where it will,” meaning that everyone who knows knows they have no idea what they will do next.
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Once again, “ain’t it the truth. “ Thanks.
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👍
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