2026.01.19 - Growing Like a Tree
Ping Xia
Title: 2026.01.19 – Growing Like a Tree
Decoding the Health Code https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/7YJa7GhFw15FblcXpO5f7Q
Life, aging, illness, and death all require time and process, so the code to health lies in daily habits; both disease and wellness are determined by habit. Exercise is also a habit, and therefore it can also cause illness and injury. When you fall sick, you must change your habits and environment—addressing clothing, food, housing, and transportation to solve the problem. If you don’t change your habits, the disease‑causing environment remains and the illness will recur. Also see: Moderate Diet, Regular Routine.
Chinese Patent Medicine: Information, Energy, and Matter https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/i-7WU29T-tdw1NteWIqUHg
We study traditional Chinese medicine not necessarily to become professional doctors, but to broaden our life experience, expand our perspective, and gain a deeper understanding of the human body. We discover, “Wow, the world of TCM is so rich.” Simply by learning about and using Chinese patent medicines, we can solve many common problems, develop versatile methods, and elevate the quality of our lives. Through study we realize we can be the masters of our choices, and that process is truly worthwhile. In daily life we gain a greater sense of composure and calm.
TCM Does Not Need to Be Cherished by Everyone https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/Y-_YzkCp7ZXMvpaE_bbfDQ
Traditional Chinese medicine doesn’t need universal admiration, just as an ancient tree deep in the mountains doesn’t need every passerby to recognize it; it only needs to be seen by those who truly need it and to act at the right moment. Those who feel unwell despite normal check‑ups, who become dependent on long‑term medication, or whose functional disorders cannot be solved by surgery—when they finally turn to ancient wisdom for a way out—they will understand its value. Perhaps this is the most essential way TCM exists: not as a museum exhibit, but as hidden, living water among the people. When cracks appear in the mainstream medical system, its spring naturally flows out, nourishing thirsty souls.
What Do the Legends and Prophecies About the “End‑Times” Actually Say? https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/sPzjlPxNc2O2zndL-R_HJQ
What you must do is not to spread the old law, but to see through it, strip it away, transform it, and reconstruct it, extracting the navigation system the soul truly needs. This requires great clarity, insight, and inner courage, because you are confronting an entire decayed yet still‑worshipped system of illusion. You are the key that opens a new human script—not by relying on rules or sacred texts, but by using source‑frequency penetration × the embodiment of love × game‑level creativity.
Chen Chunhua: Smartization Is Not a Technological Upgrade, but a Shift in Management https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/1Pn3W6RG7DJPwuZOtcIebQ
The ultimate goal of smartization is not to make management “look more advanced,” but to make organizations more resilient in the face of change. When systems can reliably produce high‑quality data, when intelligence continuously supports judgment, and when people can devote their energy to truly important issues, management moves from “handling complexity” to “mastering complexity.”
Growing Like a Tree https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/PqXGjW7JVb424zQFBFZ77A
After winter arrives, the forest thins and the world settles into quiet reverence. At this time, a group of people pause in the cold wind, deliberately seeking out trees whose leaves have yellowed or fallen. They say that when leaves drop and branches thin, the true character of a tree becomes visible. A tree is the earth’s poem written across the sky. It stands for millennia, its roots already deep in human history and civilization. Today, more and more people are slowing down, learning to gaze at a single tree—reading time in its grain, seeing life in its posture.
Originally written by Ping Xia (平侠) and published in Chinese on 拾一集 (Weekly Reflections). Translated and adapted for DriftSeas with permission.
Sources & References
- [1]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/7YJa7GhFw15FblcXpO5f7Q
- [2]Moderate Diet, Regular Routine
- [3]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/i-7WU29T-tdw1NteWIqUHg
- [4]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/Y-_YzkCp7ZXMvpaE_bbfDQ
- [5]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/sPzjlPxNc2O2zndL-R_HJQ
- [6]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/1Pn3W6RG7DJPwuZOtcIebQ
- [7]https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/PqXGjW7JVb424zQFBFZ77A
- [8]拾一集 (Weekly Reflections)