Volume I — Tao

The Valley Spirit

Chapter 6 of the Tao Te Ching

谷神不死,是謂玄牝。 玄牝之門,是謂天地根。 綿綿若存,用之不勤。

The valley spirit never dies— this is called the mysterious female. The gateway of the mysterious female— this is called the root of heaven and earth. Continuous, as if barely existing, use it and it is never exhausted.

Watch the Short

Commentary

The valley spirit is emptiness that receives. Unlike the peak that stands isolated, the valley gathers all waters that flow toward it. This is the secret of inexhaustible power: not accumulation but receptivity. The practitioner who empties himself becomes the valley into which Qi naturally flows. He does not grasp for energy; he creates the conditions for energy to arrive. "Mysterious female" points directly to the Dan Tian and the principle of yin cultivation. The womb creates life not through force but through providing space. In Neidan practice, we learn to cultivate this feminine principle regardless of our physical form. The Dan Tian becomes like a womb—empty, dark, warm, receptive. Within this darkness, something quickens. Within this stillness, transformation occurs. The aggressive mind that tries to force spiritual development achieves nothing; the yielding mind that creates proper conditions discovers that the work happens of its own accord. Wang Bi understood the gateway as the threshold between manifest and unmanifest—the point where being emerges from non-being. In meditation, this gateway is experienced directly: the moment between thoughts, the pause between breaths, the stillness from which movement arises. Heshang Gong emphasized the literal breath: the gate through which life enters and leaves, the continuous thread connecting our small body to the body of the cosmos. "Continuous, as if barely existing"—this describes both the Tao's presence and the quality of settled meditation. The practitioner who forces awareness maintains it briefly and exhausts himself. The practitioner who barely holds it—like a silk thread that might break, like a candle that might extinguish—discovers that this delicate attention can be sustained indefinitely. "Use it and it is never exhausted." The valley fills with rain and the rain flows away and the valley remains empty, ready for the next rain.

The full commentary continues with deeper analysis of internal cultivation, classical perspectives, and cross-references. Read the complete chapter →

Key Characters

Valley — lowly, receptive, empty; gathers all waters; the model for inexhaustible power
shén
Spirit — that which animates; the mysterious presence within; what cannot be grasped yet cannot be denied
xuán
Mysterious, profound — dark depth beyond ordinary comprehension; the ineffable quality of the source
pìn
Female — the generative, receptive principle; power through yielding; the womb that creates through emptiness
mén
Gate, gateway — the threshold between states; where transformation occurs; the breath's passage

Read the Full Chapter

The complete translation includes four classical perspectives — Wang Bi, Heshang Gong, Chan Buddhist, and Internal Martial Arts — plus a detailed character-by-character reference guide.

Look Inside on Amazon