#27 Lao Zhi Chang on the Tao of Ego, Growth through Suffering, and Lessons from a Kidnapping

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Welcome to part 2 of my unforgettable interview with Taoist (Daoist) Abbot Lao Zhi Chang. If you have not yet listened to part 1, episode 26, I suggest starting there and then coming back to this episode. But you will still benefit from both regardless of the order you listen to them.

Welcome to part 2 of my unforgettable interview with Taoist (Daoist) Abbot Lao Zhi Chang. If you have not yet listened to part 1, episode 26, I suggest starting there and then coming back to this episode. But you will still benefit from both regardless of the order you listen to them.

We covered a lot of ground in part 1 and continue at a sobering pace in this episode. Lao lays some foundations of understanding human behaviour, from Jungian psychology and the concept of ego to the 6 human needs and the 5 emotions of Chinese Medicine. We discuss how practicing our reactions can help us control our reactions, as nobody else controls them. We alone are responsible for our emotions.

Lao takes us on an exploration of the lessons that can be learned from the mythology of Ganesha, fathering with consciousness, and his harrowing experience being kidnapped near the Caspian Sea. He also demonstrates the value of making peace with pain, using suffering as a vehicle for growth, and forging connections as service to others.

If you don’t accept credit from people, you never have to take their blame.
— Lao Zhi Chang

There is simply so much merit in this interview that you won’t want to miss a minute of either part, and you will probably want to listen again and again.

Please enjoy this episode of Salish Wolf with Lao Zhi Chang.  

Episode Links:

Episode 26 with Lao Zhi Chang

Episode 9 with Luke Gifford

Episode 10 with Luke Gifford

Episode 12 with Christa Black Gifford

Cloe Madanes

Anchor Point Links:

Men’s Retreats at Anchor Point Expeditions

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#28 Kenneth Cohen on Qigong, the Beauty of the Tao, and Oolong Tea

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#26 Lao Zhi Chang on the Orphan Raised by a Monk, Taoing the Tao, and Deactivating Triggers