2026-05-28

我花了十年想「赢」,老子第八章改变了一切

I Spent 10 Years Trying to "Win" as a Leader. Laozi Chapter 8 Changed Everything.

2026-05-28

There's a line in the Tao Te Ching that I read maybe thirty times before it actually landed:

上善若水。水善利萬物而不爭,處眾人之所惡,故幾於道。
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"The highest good is like water. Water gives life to all things and does not compete. It flows in places people reject — and so it is like the Tao."
— Tao Te Ching, Chapter 8

For most of my career, I thought leadership was about winning. Winning clients. Winning arguments. Winning market share. Being the smartest person in the room.

Water doesn't win anything. Water doesn't compete. And yet — as Laozi points out — nothing on earth is stronger.

Four Dimensions of Water-Like Leadership

Laozi names seven dimensions (七善). Four hit me hardest.

1. Dwell Low — 居善地 (jū shàn dì)

Water doesn't choose the highest ground. It flows to the lowest place — because that's where everything collects.

Don't position yourself above your team. Position yourself where the real work happens.

2. Think Deep — 心善淵 (xīn shàn yuān)

A shallow stream makes noise. A deep pool is silent.

The leader who talks most in meetings is usually the one who's thought least beforehand.

3. Govern Level — 正善治 (zhèng shàn zhì)

Water is perfectly level. It doesn't favor one side over another.

The hardest part of leadership isn't making decisions — it's making them without favoring the people you like.

4. Move at the Right Time — 動善時 (dòng shàn shí)

Water doesn't force its way through a dam. It waits.

Some problems can't be solved now. Some decisions can't be made yet. The discipline to wait — to not force an answer because the calendar says it's time — is one of the most underrated leadership skills.

The Line That Changes Everything

夫唯不爭,故無尤。
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"Only by not competing can you be free of blame."

- If your metric is being right, you'll always be competing.
- If your metric is making things better, you stop caring about credit. And paradoxically, you become far more effective.

I still catch myself competing. Old habits die hard. But when I remember to ask, "What would water do here?" — I usually know the answer.

And it's rarely what my ego wanted me to do.


What's a leadership lesson that took you way too long to learn?

道德经 领导力 老子 Tao Te Ching Leadership