Singing for Water 💦 Day 95. On this #fullmoon, reflecting on the way of the warrior vs the way of water. 🌕 Reading the last works of Ursula K LeGuin, a writing mentor I’m so grateful to have known and studied with, I discover this beautiful passage: 🌕 “Lao Tzu says:... The weakest, most yielding thing in the world, as he calls it, water chooses the lowest path, not the high road. It gives way to anything harder than itself, offers no resistance, flows around obstacles, accepts whatever comes to it, lets itself be used and divided and defiled, yet continues to be itself and to go always in the direction it must go. 🌕 “The tides of the oceans obey the moon while the great currents of the open sea keep on their ways beneath. Water deeply at rest is yet always in motion; the stillest lake is constantly, invisibly transformed into vapor, rising in the air. 🌕 “A river can be dammed and diverted... so drained for human uses that it never reaches the sea, yet in all those bypaths and usages its water remains itself and pursues its course, flowing down and on, above ground or underground, breathing itself out into the air in evaporation, rising in mist, fog, cloud, returning to earth as rain, refilling the sea. 🌕 “Water doesn’t have only one way. It has infinite ways, it takes whatever way it can, it is utterly opportunistic, and all life on earth depends on this passive, yielding, uncertain, adaptable, changeable element. 🌕 “The death way or the life way? The high road of the warrior, or the river road?” 🌕 “I know what I want. I want to live with courage, with compassion, in patience, in peace.” - Ursula K. LeGuin 🌕 Thank you @ursulakleguin . . #100daychallenge #100dayproject #100daysofsinging (at English Camp Historic Park) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bm-Yb9aArxF/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=190m58vfprtyt