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Life's Wisdom
Life's Wisdom
  • Forword to the "Chapter of Wisdom"
  • Crossing the River as Stones
  • Where Did My Six Hours Go?
  • Emptiness, Spirit, Grace
  • Balancing the Abstract and the Concrete
  • Avoid the Long-Term Impact of Small Load Energy
  • Enemies Are Benefactors: The Path of Repaying Debts
  • Space and Hatred
  • Faith is Truth, Love is LIFE
  • What Are You Busy With?
  • The Longer the Gestation, the Sweeter the Fruit
  • Adding Value to LIFE
  • The Secret to Health
  • Do Not Disturb—Joy Lies Within It
  • Eliminate One Source of Profit, Amplify Efforts Tenfold
  • The Sun in the Black Hole
  • Observing the Profound and the Manifest
  • Enlightenment
  • Follow Your Nature
  • Those Who Have Long-Term Concerns Will Have Immediate Troubles
  • Move the Earth
  • The Way of the Tao Seems Obscure; Advancing in the Tao Seems Like Retreating
  • The Highest Form of Communication
  • Always Do Simple Things
  • Seeking the Optimal Combination
  • Unused Medicines are the Best Medicines
  • The Sustenance of Life
  • The Path of Understanding, Seeking, Realizing, Attaining, and Upholding the Way
  • How About Turning 180 Degrees to See the Scenery?
  • Transform Consciousness and Abandon Wisdom—Entering the Hall of LIFE
  • One Who Is in Harmony With the Tao, the Tao Likewise Delights in Him
  • The Highest Goodness Is Like Water
  • The Highest Wisdom is Formless
  • The Harm of Thought Inertia
  • The Scholar Stays Home
  • Expanding the Space of LIFE
  • Seeking the Best Fulcrum for Life
  • Follow Your Heart’s Desires Without Overstepping Boundaries
  • The First Step to Returning to Youth
  • Resolving Contradictions in the Invisible
  • The Most Easily Obtained is the Most Precious
  • The Magical First Time
  • Whimsical Fantasies: Exploring Extraordinary Abilities
  • Unshakable and Following One's Nature
  • Follow Your Intuition When Necessary
  • The Great Way (Tao) and the Small Path
  • Enrich Your Inner Self
  • Surrendering Life to the Tao's Arrangement
  • The Finite and the Infinite
  • Small Matters and Big Matters
  • The Three Essential Elements of a Fulfilling Life
  • A Revelation from Walnuts and Peaches
  • Chaos and Holographic Order
  • Establishing Oneself in Society through Rich Inner Content
  • The Heart of Comparison is the Heart of Malice
  • Examining Whether You Belong to the Masses
  • The Differences Between Minor, Moderate, and Great Filial Piety
  • The Subtle Techniques for Achieving a State of Emptiness
  • Do Not Suffer Yourself for Goals
  • So-called Coincidences are Links in the Chain of Inevitability
  • Is Coincidence Accidental?
  • From the Kingdom of Necessity to the Kingdom of Freedom
  • Everything Is Inevitable; Only I Roam Free
  • The Self in All Things
  • The Constant Nature of All Actions
  • The Benefit of Existence and the Utility of Emptiness
  • The Utility Cannot Be Seen and the Visible Cannot Be Used
  • Act Without Striving, Handling Things Without Interfering, Savor the Flavorless
  • The Objective World is a Reflection of Subjective Consciousness
  • Break Through the Consciousness of Walls
  • Unite with Heaven, Resonate at the Same Frequency
  • The Reference Frame and Coordinate System of Life
  • Mutual Generation and Restraint Maintain Balance
  • Destruction and Creation
  • Two Parallel Lines Intersect at One Point
  • The Secret to Acquiring Infinite Energy
  • The Three Major Pursuits in Life
  • Appearance and Essence
  • Positioning Your Life
  • Secrets of Diet
  • The Many Benefits of Knowing About the Afterlife
  • The Three Great Treasures of Life
  • Strategic Life
  • The Spiritual Life
  • A Life Without Regrets
  • Escape from Despair
  • Chasing the Sun and Escaping the Night
  • Infants Who Never Grow Up
  • Do Not Offer Help Unless Asked For
  • Further Discussion on “Do Not Offer Help Unless Asked for”
  • Looking for Your Own Garden of Eden
  • Abandonment Is an Achievement
  • Consciousness, Structure, and Energy are the Three Elements of the Universe
  • Who is Wrong?
  • How to Use Free Will
  • Should We Maintain Kindness?
  • Conquering Demonic Nature
  • Your Enemies Will Be the Members of Your Own Household
  • The Eight Great Awakenings from Human to Celestial Being
  • The Cerebellum and the Brain
  • That which is Easily Hurt is Weak and Flawed
  • Fate and Transcending Fate
  • Escaping the Traps of Life
  • Patterns and Endings
  • It was We who Sold our Own Liberty
  • Four Outlooks will give you Harmony
  • Some Perceptions about Life
  • My Reply to the Four Questions Raised by the Chairman of the International Federation of Philosophic
  • The Thinking Style and Approach to Action in Spiritual Thinking
  • Those Who Have Constant Faith Will Have Constant Actions
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The Benefit of Existence and the Utility of Emptiness

Xuefeng

What exists is beneficial; what is empty is useful. “Benefit” refers to tangible gains, tools, and consumables; “utility” refers to things that can be used in various ways and applied repeatedly.

For example, when you buy a radish from the market, the radish represents benefit—it's a consumable good, used once and gone.

Similarly, a dictionary is a benefit. It is a tool that can be used repeatedly, but it is static—it does not change.

Earning a hundred yuan is a benefit, but once it’s spent, it’s gone.

Radishes, dictionaries, and money provide tangible benefits; they are consumable or utilitarian objects.

An empty room, on the other hand, represents utility. It can be used as a bedroom, a study, or for storage. Its applications are varied and can be used repeatedly.

Interpersonal relationships and friendships are also utilitarian. They can be used for conversation, emotional support, or to help achieve personal goals.

A blank sheet of paper is utilitarian as well. You can draw on it, write on it, or fold it into a paper airplane for a child’s entertainment.

Buying a refrigerator offers utility because its interior is empty, making it useful for storage. A drinking cup is useful because it’s hollow, allowing it to hold water. A computer is useful because its internal structure enables it to connect to the internet and offer limitless possibilities.

A car, being hollow, also serves as a utility. It provides practical benefits, like transportation, which is a form of benefit.

Learning knowledge and skills is useful, but since knowledge and skills can also bring tangible benefits, they also serve as benefits.

Things we can see and hear can be regarded as benefits; those that are beyond sight, hearing, and smell can be regarded as utilities.

What exists as tangible benefit is a consumable; what is void or empty is a utility with unlimited potential for repeated use.

Benefit is temporary; utility is infinite.

For example, a water cup filled with water (existing) has only one use: holding water. Once the water is poured out (non-existing), the cup can have multiple uses: holding milk, coffee, tea, flowers, or other items.

When a utility item is filled (existing), it serves a single purpose; when it is empty (non-existing), it becomes useful in many ways. A blank sheet of paper filled with writing (existing), a room filled with items (existing), or a ship filled with passengers (existing) are all considered benefits. When these things are empty (non-existing), they revert to their utility value.

Benefits are tangible and consumable, while utilities are abstract, offering greater value through their potential for varied and repeated use.

When thoughts become rigid and minds are fixed, when hearts are filled with preconceptions, people turn into one-time-use objects, having benefit but no utility. When loving partners marry, establish a home, and their relationship becomes fixed, it turns into a one-time-use tool with no further utility. Becoming obsessed with a particular religion, political party, doctrine, or theory to the point of dogmatism leads to rigid and dead thinking, making it no longer useful.

Consistently having tangible benefits means frequent gains; consistently embracing emptiness means frequent utility.

A spring stretched to its elastic limit and no longer rebounds becomes useless. A fist extended and not withdrawn is no longer useful. A person who is dominated by others loses their utility. A mind that stops thinking loses its use. A soul clouded by worldly phenomena loses its freedom and spiritual perception.

When events arise, the heart responds; when events fade, the heart remains empty and fresh. When emotions come, love manifests; when emotions fade, love remains empty, and the person remains loving. The wind rustles the bamboo, but when the wind passes, no sound lingers. A goose crosses a cold pond, leaving no trace. The bamboo and pond remain fresh and beautiful. Not lingering in the midst of flowers and songs, not dwelling on achievements or moral perfection, not becoming attached to deep emotions or nostalgia, not remaining in places of sorrow, anger, hatred, or resentment—this makes life rich and vibrant. Life moves forward without reincarnation, reaching the Celestial Islands Continent of the Elysium World.

Consistently holding onto benefits equates to life being a fleeting dream; consistently embracing emptiness reveals life as a true realm of bliss.

To embrace death is to frequently hold onto benefits; to embrace life is to frequently embrace emptiness.

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Last updated 7 months ago