
To yield: the art of retreat
Red Rock, New Mexico Abstract
Prints are available here.
The generals have a saying:
"Rather than make the first move
it is better to wait and see.
Rather than advance an inch
it is better to retreat a yard."When two great forces oppose each other,
the victory will go
to the one that knows how to yield.
- Stephen Mitchell, from his 1995 translation of the Tao Te Ching
. . .
I have, above my desk, a little plaque that a subscriber sent to me twenty years ago. It says, “what sets your heart Free?” Then in a small font it says, “surrender.”
Years ago, in my interview of arctic explorer Will Steger, he said to me that in raising money to fund his expeditions, and surviving on the expeditions themselves, he follows the dictum, “Give in, give in but never give up.”
I find military strategy fascinating, despite the horror that results. I’ve read biographies of many of the major military leaders of the last two thousand years. One of my favorites is Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus, known also as the “Delayer” or the “Cunctator.” He saved Rome from being overrun by Hannibal by employing the strategy of drawing his enemy into countless fruitless maneuvers and in the process exhausting them. He specialized in the art of retreat. He would muster his army on far off hilltops, and when Hannibal rushed over to engage, the Cunctator would disappear and then reappear miles away, behind Hannibal’s forces, where he cut off supply lines.
Similarly, the United States seems to have a strange habit of engaging in wars on the other side of the globe. There they win every battle, but lose every war. The Taliban had a saying, “They’ve got the watches, but we’ve got the time.” Similarly, George Washington used these tactics against the British, the Vietnamese against the French, and later the Americans, the Russians against Napoleon, Sam Houston and the Army of Texas against the Mexicans. Castro started with 160 men. After directly confronting Batista’s army of 30,000, he was left with twelve. Shifting tactics, he wore Batista down.
This philosophy of bending, not breaking, of yielding, of being like water not like rock, is a central tenet of Taoism. Sun Tzu's The Art of War states that "supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy's resistance without fighting".
The art of retreating in order to exhaust one’s enemy, to gradually sap their morale, has shaped history.
. . .
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Nurturing The Song Within explores the inner work out of which creative work and a unique human life evolve. It contains key insights from hundreds of interviews Heron Dance founder Roderick MacIver has conducted over the last thirty years of people who choose their own path in life, and persist through the challenges and setbacks to make their dreams real.
Those interviewed include artists, adventurers, activists, and people who devote their lives to serving others. The book explores the murky waters of deep imagination, friendship with one’s inner world, and how those inspire creativity. In the interviews, and through reflections on both those interviews and his own life, the author seeks to understand the hidden wellsprings that guide and provide the clarity and courage required to create a unique life. This is a book by someone who has done it –- who has been a fulltime working artist for thirty years. Over ninety of the author’s full color paintings accompany the reflections and interview excerpts in each volume of the two-book set.
A human life is an expression of ideas, of dreams, of courage and of discipline. Or the lack thereof. A life fully lived, a unique life, grows out of something deep – the essence of a human being. It evolves out of that which is sacred inside each of us. Its exact source is difficult to explain; it can however be sensed and understood.
There are still a few copies of the first edition of Nurturing the Song Within available. This is a premium art book with a Smyth-sewn lay flat binding. It explores the inner work underlying creative work.
There are still a few copies of the first edition of Nurturing the Song Within available. This is a premium art book with a Smyth-sewn lay flat binding. It explores the inner work underlying creative work.
Each two-page spread includes a painting and observations on living a creative, meaningful life.
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