Why hasn't someone thought of this before? Solala Towler, a leading Daoist advocate, teacher, and healer, has developed a practice component to China's great spiritual classic, the Tao Te Ching (TTC) of Lao-tzu.
Towler interprets the 81 verses of the TTC. first through informed commentary, then through a series of Qigong-inspired practices, including flowing movements, meditations, and repetitive exercises. The result provides a yang complement to the mysterious yin text.
Just as Daoism (also spelled Taoism) attempts to understand the meaning of life through the interaction of opposite poles (light and dark, male and female, day and night), this presentation engages all our senses as we experience the TTC not just with our intelligence and mind, but also with our bodies, feelings, and intuition. It is a fully integrated approach based on Towler's lifelong study and practice of Daoist principles.
Reading Towler's commentaries and then engaging in even a few of these activities will open up the classic in unexpected ways, no matter how many translations of the work you have read and studied over the years. Towler keeps both the text and the practices simple, engaging, and pleasurable. Whether one is a beginner or an experienced scholar or sage, Practicing the Tao Te Ching is a new classic that belongs on the bookshelf of everyone interested in self-improvement, enlightenment, and world culture.