The Tao Te Ching teaches by paradox: the winning move looks like losing. Nine skills turn its oldest images — water, valley, vessel, reed — into small worlds you can act inside.
"The best way is like water: good to all things, arguing with none, gathering in the low places everyone else avoids."
— Tao Te Ching, ch. 8 · rendered from Legge
From the element itself, through the low place among people, to the way back. Each lesson is a centerline between two ditches — a far enemy on one side, a near one on the other.
Each module turns an enduring image into a small world you act inside — make a choice, feel the consequence, and let the sage name the near and far enemies. Step into any of them; the ones you finish are marked complete.
Forty cards across the verses, the terms, the near enemies, the metaphors, and the gusts. Flip, shuffle, and mark what you know.
Open the deck