What happens to effort and labor if Lao Tzu says to do nothing?
Synthesized from Source
outcome
"True non-doing is not the absence of effort, but the supreme act of surrendering the ego and mastering the art of letting go."
According to Osho, Lao Tzu’s “do nothing” doesn’t abolish effort—it cancels ordinary striving and demands the supreme effort: surrender. Actions are easy; animals act. The hardest labor is to drop the doer, to let go of the ego completely. True non-doing is mastery: an ultimate, all-consuming resolve that ends compulsive effort by yielding totally.
Doing nothing means the toughest work is to stop trying and gently let go of your ‘me’ that wants to control everything.
Why this matters practically
- Lowers stress and burnout by ending compulsive striving.
- Builds inner mastery by practicing surrender over habits and ego.
- Deepens relationships through humility and letting go of control.
- Builds inner mastery by practicing surrender over habits and ego.
- Deepens relationships through humility and letting go of control.
AI Confidence Score: 96%
Read Original Discourse →