Possibility Thinking
This week we look at embracing possibility, touching the radiant core within, and living with the quiet inner knowing of truth. Plus, a little "Thank you" in Moments of inspiration.
"I speak my truth, and I honour the trembling as well as the strength in my voice. With each 'and' I choose, I open a new door to possibility, where my Inner Child learns that growth and fear can walk hand in hand."
Have you ever caught yourself uttering a hopeful sentence, only to negate it with a single word? Perhaps something like, “I want to pursue my dreams, but I’m afraid I’ll fail”, or “I know I’m talented, but no one appreciates it.” These common phrases often go unnoticed, yet they reveal an internal struggle between hope and hesitation. What if the limits we face are not out there in the world but within our language and, more importantly, our belief systems?
In this journal post, we explore the profound impact of one small but mighty shift: replacing the word “but” with “and.” This subtle transition can change not just how we speak, but also how we perceive reality, respond to challenges, and direct our life’s energy. We’ll delve deeply into Taoist philosophy and Wu Wei Wisdom to discover how this linguistic shift opens up space for acceptance, growth, and transformation. Along the way, we’ll unravel how the Inner Child often uses “but” as a shield for safety and how we can gently challenge this narrative with clarity, compassion, and consistency.
You see, the words we speak are not just sound, they’re structure. Every word we utter lays a foundation, a brick in the house of our reality. And just like any builder knows, the quality of the materials shapes the strength and beauty of the home. So, we must ask ourselves: “What kind of house are we building with our words?” Are we creating a space of openness, authenticity, and possibility, or are we bricking ourselves into rooms of fear, limitation, and doubt?
Each time we say “but,” it’s as if we’re placing a wall where a window could be. It’s the difference between a closed door and an open invitation. Saying “I want to express myself, but I might be judged” creates a room with no exit. Replace it with “I want to express myself, and I know it will be challenging,” and suddenly you’re standing in a hallway that leads to growth, where fear and courage walk side by side.
Taoist wisdom reminds us that “the Tao flows everywhere,” not in straight lines or fixed walls, but in curves, bends, and harmonies. The words we choose must reflect this natural flow. When we habitually use words that block, deny, or restrict, we create emotional architecture that is rigid and narrow. The Inner Child, unsure of the unknown, chooses “but” as a kind of fortress or protection, attempting to keep discomfort at bay. Yet, in doing so, it also locks in possibility.
By becoming conscious of our language, we begin to live more mindfully and honestly. “And” is not merely a word; it is a practice of inclusion. It allows two seemingly opposing truths to coexist without needing to negate each other. It is how we say to ourselves: “I am learning, and I don’t have to be perfect.” “I am creating fear, and I’m willing to understand why.” These statements are not contradictions; they are bridges between the present and the possible.
So, let’s begin our journey with this powerful reminder: the words we choose today become the world we live in tomorrow. Let’s build a space that reflects our Shen, our eternal essence of truth, honesty, and integrity. Let’s construct our emotional homes with care, crafting rooms where all parts of us are welcome: the bold, the uncertain, the curious, and the courageous.
With every “and” we use, we lay down a new brick in the house of possibility. And as we continue this exploration, we’ll learn how to furnish that house with the timeless grace of wu wei, transforming each phrase we speak into a doorway toward alignment, wisdom, and authentic living.
Let us journey into the heart of ‘Possibility Thinking’, where limitations dissolve and the path forward becomes clearer. And before we take another step, let’s practise one of the most potent teachings I share with my clients: when you catch yourself saying the word “but” in the middle of a sentence, pause. Just stop for a moment. Breathe. Drop your shoulders. And truly listen to yourself. What comes after “but” often cancels everything that came before. It’s as if the Inner Child leans in and quietly mutters, “Forget what I just said. I don’t really believe it!”
This is the crossroads. The breath before the belief. The moment when your language reveals your loyalty, to fear or growth. “But” tells a story of limitation, of retreat, of uncertainty dressed as misguided logic. Yet when we pause and notice its arrival, we are no longer sleepwalking through our words. We awaken to the subtle architecture of our beliefs. And in that space, between the breath and the next word, we have a choice.
We can choose to build with “and.” We can select expansion over erasure, movement over standstill. We can say, “I want to try, and I know it might be hard,” rather than “I want to try, but I might not be good enough.” The first affirms the desire and honours the challenge. The second quietly closes the door before the journey begins.
‘Possibility Thinking’ invites us to stand in that sacred pause and reframe. To speak with honesty, not habit. To build sentences and lives that are wide enough to hold both the hope and the hurdle. This is where the Tao lives: in the space between surrendering to fear and stepping into flow. This is our invitation to speak differently so that we may also live differently.
The Hidden Impact of “But”
The word “but” seems innocent, yet it acts as a complete stop in the middle of a sentence filled with hope. “I want to heal, but it’s impossible.” “I believe in myself, but I know I will fail.” We speak our desires only to negate them in the same breath. This single conjunction acts like a mental eraser, nullifying our aspirations and reinforcing hesitation and doubt.
In Taoist wisdom, such contradictory language reflects a deeper conflict within the Shen, our spiritual essence. “But” signifies a tug-of-war between the part of us that dreams of our potential and the Inner Child that requires certainty. When we say, “I want to succeed, but I will not be able to cope,” the second half steals all the energy from the first. Our Inner Child, craving security, uses this word to retreat from uncertainty into the comfort of familiarity.
Taoism teaches that we create our experiences through the beliefs and choices behind our emotions. As shared in our journal “Turning Negatives into Positives,” “Our Inner Child uses restricting words, worst-case scenarios and victim statements to maintain its familiar narrative… even when this safety stifles our potential.” Replacing “but” with “and” doesn’t deny the fear; it simply refuses to let fear lead.
The Freedom of “And”
What if we could hold both our desires and our doubts with grace? What if instead of negating our growth, we embraced it? That is the power of “and.”
Listen to the reframe: “I want to start my business, and I’m learning to manage my emotions.” The shift is immediate and profound. Now, both truths coexist. We are no longer forced to choose between aspiration and hesitation; we are living authentically with both. This is the essence of Taoist alignment: not choosing sides, but harmonising with the full spectrum of our reality.
The Tao Te Ching in Verse 35 reminds us, “Hold to the great form, and all will follow. They come without harm, resting in harmony.” When we hold to the “great form”, the balanced inclusion of all experiences, we create space for alignment, where aspirations and doubts are part of the same unfolding journey.
The Inner Child and the Language of Safety
Our Inner Child seeks refuge in black-and-white thinking. It pesters with questions like, “What if I fail?” and reproaches with thoughts like, “You should be further along by now.” When we say “but,” it reassures; its fears are validated. Yet validation without challenge becomes stagnation.
As described in our journal “From Fear to Flow – The Inner Child’s Journey,” the Inner Child often closes its mind in a protective shell, resisting new experiences in favour of predictability. Saying “and” gently opens that shell. It acknowledges fear without granting it control. It’s the voice of the loving adult saying, “Yes, this is hard, and I’m doing it anyway.”
By embracing the unknown with “and,” we take small, consistent steps into growth. This is the path of wu wei, effortless effort. It is not about force, but about flow; not about denying difficulty, but moving through it with grace and trust.
Expanding the Middle Ground
Taoism constantly reminds us that life is not lived at the extremes. Wu wei invites us to dance along the middle path, neither resisting nor unquestioningly accepting, just participating. “And” opens up this sacred middle ground.
Imagine saying: “I want to speak my truth, and I’m still learning how to do that authentically.” Suddenly, we grant ourselves space to be a work in progress, without shame. This is not weakness; it is the embodiment of authentic strength. It's how we teach our Inner Child that the unknown isn’t danger, but rather the seed of transformation.
Overcoming CCJ and Embracing Possibility
Criticising, comparing, and being judgmental, what we call CCJ, are the natural companions of “but.” They emerge when we measure ourselves by external standards or imagined ideals. “I’ve done well, but she’s done better.” “I’m happy, but I should be more grateful.” These are not just comparisons; they are self-inflicted limitations.
Replacing “but” with “and” breaks the chain. “I’ve done well, and I can learn more.” This is not a denial of truth, but an expansion of it. It's not about being perfect; it's about being in alignment.
As taught in “Unfolding the Tao Within,” journal post, the journey is not about reaching a destination but honouring each step: “Our lives are evolving masterpieces… each brushstroke guiding us towards our authentic core.” Each “and” is a brushstroke, blending colour and contrast into the canvas of our becoming.
Living with Shen Confidence
Taoist philosophy teaches us that our Shen, the inner divine light, remains untouched by fear or doubt. It is the part of us that always believes in the possibility of growth, no matter how often we hesitate.
When we speak from our Shen, we speak with honesty, integrity, and inclusion. “I am learning and growing.” “I have been knocked and am still courageous.” This language is not inflated or boastful; it is grounded, open-hearted, and free.
We become possibility thinkers not by denying challenge but by including it as part of the path. And in this inclusion, we find our authentic strength. We become whole, not in perfection, but in acceptance.
The Path Ahead: Effortless Alignment
Let us remember that every time we say “and,” we walk a little further away from doubt and a little closer to trust. We make space for complexity without chaos, emotion without overwhelm, and growth without pressure.
This is wu wei, not passive drifting, but harmonious navigation. It is not about removing every obstacle but about recognising that we can move with and through them as Hexagram 53 of the I Ching teaches: “Gradual progress, like a tree growing by the riverbank. Rooted, it reaches upward without haste.”
Let us adopt this rhythm. Let us speak and live with the word “and” guiding our steps, acknowledging both our fears and our courage, our uncertainty and our resolve. No more cancelling dreams with “but.” Instead, we live into possibility.
Choose “And” Every Time
‘Possibility Thinking’ is more than a change in vocabulary; it is a revolution in how we live, how we believe, and how we grow. We are no longer held hostage by contradiction; we are free to include, expand, and evolve.
So, the next time you speak of your hopes, your fears, your plans, or your progress, pause before the “but.” Replace it with “and.” Choose to move forward with gentle honesty, compassionate truth, and unshakable self-belief.
Let us affirm together: “I am capable of great things, and I am learning more every day.” “I honour my fears, and I choose to grow anyway.” “I speak from peace, alignment, and not from certainty and perfection.”
This is the way of the Tao. This is wu wei. This is ‘Possibility Thinking’. And from this moment on, we walk that path together, step by step, choice by choice, with courage, clarity, and the quiet confidence of Shen.
Never doubt yourself. Take small, consistent, manageable steps, without expectation, without criticism, comparison, or being judgmental (CCJ). Let your language open your life. Choose “and,” and let ‘Possibility Thinking’ unfold.
Have you ever noticed how fear arrives uninvited, creeping into our choices, casting shadows over our confidence, and halting our progress before we’ve even taken the first step? Do you sometimes doubt your inner strength, believing the voice that says you're not enough, not ready, not capable? The journey we’re about to embark on, 'Radiant Core’, is not about slaying dragons or achieving perfection. It’s about rediscovering something far more powerful: the unwavering light that already resides within us, waiting for us to acknowledge it.
In this journal post, we’ll explore why fear emerges and how it becomes the voice of doubt. We’ll explore how our Inner Child uses fear as a protective shield and how we can step into alignment with the Tao through wu-wei, or effortless effort. We’ll discuss the Taoist teachings that show us how fear is not an enemy to be vanquished but a signpost guiding us back to truth. And we’ll discover why trusting the ‘Radiant Core’ of our spirit allows us to move beyond hesitation, shame, or uncertainty and into a place of calm confidence.
We will shine a gentle light on our limiting beliefs and explain how they are formed, not to judge or criticise, but to better understand and transform them. Most of all, this journal post is a loving reminder: never doubt yourself. You already hold what you need.
But have you ever paused to ask, “What part of you is doing the doubting?” What part of you believes it has the authority to question, criticise, and compare the other part? This question may sound subtle, yet it reveals something profound: the existence of an internal separation. When we explore self-doubt with clients, what often emerges is not a lack of ability, but a fractured inner dialogue, the Inner Child, in its innocence, attempting to take charge of decisions far beyond its role. In doing so, it not only questions our worth but creates a false hierarchy within our minds. One part of us, the Inner Child, acts as if it alone holds the right to approve or disapprove, to measure and to judge. But by what wisdom? What experience? Certainly not from our eternal Shen spirit, which knows only truth, trust, and the balance of Oneness.
This internal hierarchy is not only emotionally destabilising, but also illogical. The idea that one part of ourselves can sit in judgment over another is a construct rooted in emotional confusion, not spiritual clarity. It places the frightened, reactive Inner Child above the serene, wise spirit. And when we allow that construct to go unexamined, we permit a belief system built on comparison and control to dominate our inner world and bend reality.
Taoist wisdom gently dissolves this illusion. There is no higher or lower within our being, no internal courtroom where parts of us must justify their existence. The Tao does not divide us; it unites. Shen does not question; Shen remembers. When we begin to trust this internal harmony, self-doubt loses its meaning. It is revealed not as a truth to be managed but as a misunderstanding to be outgrown. The separation fades, and what remains is a seamless wholeness, a calm confidence born from alignment.
So, let us question the belief behind the doubt, not out of fear, but out of clarity. Let us ask: “Why am I allowing one part of me to doubt another? Who gave it that authority?” The answer will lead us not to more fear, but to more profound truth. And in that realisation, we return once again to our ‘Radiant Core’, where everything we need already exists in Oneness.
Fear as the Forgotten Light
Fear rarely announces itself with clarity. It nags, pesters, and pressures us through subtle narratives, often shaped by our Inner Child. “I can’t cope,” it says. “I’m not enough.” These thoughts arise not because we’re broken, but because we’ve forgotten our inherent spiritual power. We have wandered far from our ‘Radiant Core’, that boundless reservoir of strength, wisdom and calm spirit that exists at the centre of our being.
Taoism teaches us to see the fear emotion differently. It is not a truth, but a teacher. As shared in one of our previous teachings, “The Inner Child’s protective shield often disguises its need for safety as resistance to growth.” That resistance, masked as fear, is a cry for attention, not a demand for control.
We can honour this fear by questioning it. What belief sits behind this red-light emotion? Often, it is the Inner Child’s innocent but outdated logic, trying to anticipate and fix a future it can’t control. As described in our previous journal, "From Fear to Flow – The Inner Child’s Journey," our need for control stems from our desire for safety; however, ironically, it can make us less safe by trapping us in a cycle of stagnation and doubt.
The Truth Behind the Emotion
The Tao Te Ching reminds us in Verse 36: "When something is about to grow, it must first shrink. When something is about to gain, it must first be given." Growth requires nurture. Shrinking before expanding is not failure; it’s preparation. We see this pattern reflected in nature, in seasons, and within ourselves.
Fear often signals that we are standing at the threshold of expansion. But if we listen only to its volume and not its more profound message, we miss the sacred invitation to deepen our trust. As seen in Turning Negatives into Positives, the Inner Child uses restrictive language, words like “but” or “what if”, to keep us from stepping forward. These are defence mechanisms, not prophecies. Our task is not to argue with the fear but to understand it.
This is the moment to pause, to breathe deeply into our ‘Radiant Core’, and gently say, “I see you, and I know you’re trying to protect me. But I choose to believe in our power within.”
The Way of Effortless Effort
Taoism offers us a lifeline here through the practice of wu wei, effortless effort. This is not inaction or apathy, but alignment with natural flow. It is trusting that we are already equipped for the journey, and that our role is to walk with grace, not force.
From the I Ching, Hexagram 32 speaks to this wisdom: "Endurance leads to success. Consistency brings change. Those who adapt with clarity stay in harmony with life’s unfolding." Endurance here means trust. Consistency refers to taking gentle, manageable steps, rather than bursts of frantic energy followed by collapse. When we adopt this mindset, we shift from merely surviving fear to understanding it. We stop letting it define us and start using it as a guide.
As our ‘Awakening to Your Inner Greatness’ journal beautifully reflects, “Greatness is not a destination but a return to the wholeness we’ve always carried.” When we operate from that wholeness, we act from our ‘Radiant Core’, not from the misaligned scripts of our past.
Countering Fear with Belief
When we align with the Tao, we see fear not as something to resist, but as something to outgrow. This is not denial; this is transformation. We often look outward for reassurance and validation from others, future-proofing strategies, and endless preparation. But as Verse 62 of the Tao Te Ching teaches: "The Tao is the treasure of the good person and the refuge of the one who lacks. With it, the seeker is never truly lost."
This verse reminds us that our truth does not lie in appearances or accolades, but in the steady light within. The spirit, our Shen, never doubts us. It is the Inner Child that doubts, rooted in emotional memories and misunderstanding, not reality.
By using the Golden Thread Process and gently asking, “Why do I believe this?” we begin to unearth the true nature of fear. Not a prophecy. Not an enemy. Simply a voice that can be guided with love, not obedience.
From Doubt to Radiance
To believe in our ‘Radiant Core’ is to choose trust over control, curiosity over judgment, and compassion over criticism. This is the Taoist path, not avoiding life’s complexities but embracing them with honesty and ease.
We begin with small, consistent steps. We speak kindly to ourselves when fear arises. We stop CCJ, criticising, comparing, and being judgmental. We practice stillness and listen for truth. And most of all, we act without expectation. We release the need for immediate results and instead focus on alignment.
This is wu wei in action. It’s trusting that every breath, every choice, every moment of authenticity brings us closer to harmony. So, the next time fear badgers or pesters, pause. Turn inward. And from that place of calm knowing, whisper: “I am not afraid. I am the source of my light.”
A Return to Your Radiant Core
In every Taoist journey, the return is more vital than the departure. It is the return to simplicity, to inner truth, to Spirit. We began by asking whether we could truly trust the power within. We now know that the answer was always yes! Let us affirm: “I move with clarity and calmness, trusting in my ‘Radiant Core’. I release the illusion that creates fear and realign with the flow of life.”
No longer must we seek outside ourselves for strength. We carry it. We are it. As we move forward, let us embrace our brilliance, not as an achievement, but as a remembrance. Never doubt yourself. Take small, consistent, manageable steps, and release expectations. Abandon criticism, comparing and being judgmental (CCJ). Align with wu wei.
Internal separation is not our nature. It is a misunderstanding born of conditioning, not truth. Our birthright is Oneness, mind, body, and spirit flowing in harmony. This unified state is not a distant ideal but a natural return to our ‘Radiant Core’, where nothing is missing and nothing needs to be proved. It is here, in the stillness of our Shen, that fear dissolves, doubt quiets, and authenticity rises.
This is our Tao. This is our return. This is the radiant truth of who we are. Let us walk together, not to chase perfection, but to reclaim our alignment. Every step is an act of trust: every breath, a quiet revolution. Stop waiting to feel ready. Start now, just as you are. Within you lives an unwavering light. Tend to it. Trust it. And let it lead you home.
The Need to Be Seen
Have you ever found yourself trying to stand out, to ensure the world takes notice of you? Have you ‘felt’ the thrill when someone praises you, followed by the disappointment when that praise is absent? Perhaps you’ve heard a persistent voice inside urging you to do more, be more, prove more. Or maybe you've ‘felt’ small and insignificant, worrying that if you don’t shine brighter than others, you’ll vanish completely.
This journal is for those moments when we are torn between the desire to be noticed and the fear of being overlooked. When our Inner Child pressures us with old scripts that whisper, complain, and sometimes badger us into believing that life owes us something, or that we must shrink so that no one sees we may not be perfect.
In this journal post, we will explore what it truly means to be unique and how attempting to be “special” can sometimes divert us from our authentic selves. We will reflect on how the notion of superiority can subtly infiltrate, masquerading as self-worth, often resulting in disappointment and misalignment with our natural flow. With guidance from Taoist teachings and lesser-known I Ching Hexagrams, as well as verses from the Tao Te Ching, we will unlock the door to what we refer to as ‘Quiet Brilliance’, a calm, steady light that does not require a spotlight to be acknowledged. Together, we will uncover how to return to this effortless state through gentle honesty, meaningful self-inquiry, and practical steps that lead us home, one day at a time, without expectation or CCJ—criticism, comparison, and being judgmental.
The Misunderstanding of Being “Special”
Many of us were raised with the belief that we must be exceptional to be worthy of respect. Perhaps applause came only when we outperformed others, or we were taught to blend into the background unless we had something impressive to show. Over time, we began to measure our value by how much praise we received or how often we were recognised. However, this is not the Tao’s way.
The Tao Te Ching, in its quiet wisdom, reminds us in Verse 45 that perfection is an illusion: “Your best efforts will never be perfect, but that does not mean you have failed… The straightest line can sometimes seem curved.” We do not need to straighten every twist and turn of our journey to prove we are enough. In truth, the more we try to control how we appear, the more disconnected we become from our Shen.
The Inner Child, still caught in its early reasoning, often perceives life as a competition. It views uniqueness not as a beautiful expression of spirit, but as a measure of status. It equates being special with being superior, and thus it ascends an invisible ladder, perpetually striving to reach the summit. However, that ascent is unending. When we receive praise, the Inner Child may swiftly interpret that as entitlement, “I’m special, so things should come easily to me.” And when praise is lacking, the same voice may scold, “If I’m not special, why try at all?”
‘Quiet Brilliance’ begins when we let go of that ladder entirely. We are not here to outshine one another. Our Shen shines quietly, from within. Our value is constant, not something we need to prove.
The Illusion of Entitlement
Another subtle trap arises when we begin to believe we’ve earned ease, recognition, or guarantees simply because we’ve “done the work.” The Inner Child might berate us: “I’ve meditated, journaled, grown, I shouldn’t have to deal with discomfort anymore.” However, this fosters a sense of entitlement that quickly transforms into frustration when life fails to meet those expectations.
Verse 64 of the Tao Te Ching gently cautions us: “Because the more you grasp, the less you hold… Acting impatiently without focus or clear thinking only ends in disharmony and disaster.” When we reach for outcomes, whether it be peace, rewards, or validation, we resist the flow of life. That tightness closes us off from wu wei, from the effortless effort that arises when we cease trying to control and align.
Hexagram 49 of the I Ching reminds us that fundamental transformation occurs gradually, akin to the subtle turning of the seasons. It teaches us that inner revolution, the kind that reshapes beliefs and clears away old habits, cannot be forced. This change does not arrive on demand or adhere to a schedule. It unfolds when we are ready, not when we think we deserve it.
In these moments, when the Inner Child pressures us with the story of unfairness or demands, we can gently ask ourselves: “What belief lies beneath this tension?” Most often, it is the old emotional fear of being unseen or unimportant. When we identify that fear and recognise ourselves clamouring for external validation, it loses its grip, and our energy can return to the natural rhythm of wu wei.
We can begin to harness this energy through quiet giving. By contributing without seeking recognition, we shift our belief system from pursuing rewards to valuing our silent contributions, as they represent who we are. Simple actions, such as cleaning a shared space or offering kind words anonymously, encourage us to serve not for attention but in alignment with our values. It is in this subtle background that ‘Quiet Brilliance’ begins to flourish.
Letting Your Shen Speak
To live in ‘Quiet Brilliance’ does not mean to remain silent. It involves learning to speak from Shen rather than from the Inner Child’s insecurity. It is choosing truth over drama, and honesty over retreat.
Imagine being part of a group project that is starting to unravel. The Inner Child might pressure you to complain: “Why am I the only one doing the work?” It might urge you to remain quiet to avoid confrontation: “Just fix it alone, don’t make waves.” However, there is another path. Shen pauses, breathes, and speaks in a calm tone. It might say, “It looks like we’re falling behind. Can we find a better way together?” No one is to blame. No one is glorified. And yet, progress occurs.
This type of communication requires practice. It involves pausing before we speak and reflecting on what we truly wish to convey. When we share from Shen, we honour our authenticity and open the door to collaboration rather than conflict. Shen-rooted words embody the quiet strength of the Tao: they are balanced, grounded, and profoundly true.
And when we speak like this regularly, we begin to trust ourselves more. We become someone who contributes light without needing to put on a show. This is the essence of ‘Quiet Brilliance’.
Finding Stillness in the Inner Well
When we stop striving to be special, we find something steadier, an internal compass that uniquely guides us. This compass is our Shen, and it lives at the bottom of what the I Ching calls “The Well.” In Hexagram 48, it says: “In every drop of wisdom drawn from the well, we find the essence of our true selves.” The well is never loud. It does not promote itself. It simply offers what is needed.
To keep this well clean, we return to it daily. Instead of asking, “What should I be doing to stand out?” we ask, “What truth is calling me to act today?” Instead of reviewing our day by how impressive we seemed, we reflect on how well we were aligned. “Were our words necessary? Was our contribution honest? Did we speak from Shen?”
Occasionally, old, unresolved issues resurface. We create emotions of envy, shame, or bitterness. This is not failure; it is a signal. When a friend’s success ‘triggers’ us, or a careless comment lingers in our minds, we follow the ‘Golden Thread Process’. We ask ourselves what the surface emotion is conveying and trace it back to a forgotten belief. We need not scold ourselves. We acknowledge and adjust. We offer our younger self a new truth. Then, we take a small, modern action that reflects that shift. Each time we do this, we purify the well and clear the path back to ‘Quiet Brilliance’.
Letting Brilliance Flow
Living in ‘Quiet Brilliance’ doesn’t mean giving up ambition or muting your gifts. It means moving from alignment, not imbalance. It means expressing your talents because they serve a greater good, not because you need applause. When we live this way, we are no longer chasing validation. We are no longer grasping at specialness. We are simply offering what we are, where we are, without apology or performance.
And when we do that, something remarkable happens. People notice, not because we shout, but because we resonate and flow. Taoism teaches that real influence doesn’t force; it flows. Absolute power doesn’t demand attention; it creates space. As Verse 64 of the Tao Te Ching reminds us: “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.” That step does not need to be dramatic. It only needs to be aligned.
‘Quiet Brilliance’ is not a spotlight. It’s a steady flame. We nurture it not with noise, but with integrity. Each time we choose kindness over comparison, truth over entitlement, and generosity over performance, that flame shines brighter.
Let us carry that light into the week ahead, not by trying harder, but by letting go. Not by proving our worth, but by trusting it. And not by demanding to be seen, but by seeing ourselves. Let this be our affirmation: “We honour our unique path, require no pedestal to shine, and convert every challenge into a step of ‘Quiet Brilliance’.”
And let our action be simple: one honest gesture a day. No applause required. Just a quiet step, taken in alignment. That is how we live in ‘Quiet Brilliance’ and that is how we light the way.
Moments of Inspiration…
Thank You for Your Thoughtful Suggestions
We truly appreciate the time and care you took in responding to our recent call for help with title ideas for my upcoming book on the Tao Te Ching verse and commentary. Your thoughtful contributions have given us much to reflect on, and we're deeply grateful for your insight and support.
If you’d like to listen to a Google-generated discussion on Verse 16 of the Tao Te Ching, which I exclusively shared in last week’s ‘Inner Circle’ journal, simply copy and paste this link into your browser:
http://bit.ly/46JRcaw
Once again, a heartfelt thank you. Your ongoing interest, love, and encouragement mean the world to us.
With gratitude,
David
In the next ‘Inner Circle’ (Paid) Journal…
Voices We Outgrow
Sacred Responsibility
Mirrorless Grace
Moments of Inspiration
In the next Free Journal…
Wild Equilibrium
Perfectly Human
Mirage Mindset
Moments of Inspiration
Journal #F038 21/07/2025