The Way of Water

A water drop.
A drop of water can penetrate the soil and collapse a mountain; a drop of water can gather into a stream and form a river or an ocean. (Image: nullnull via Dreamstime)

Water can teach us profound lessons about how to live a dignified life 

It falls from the sky, flows all around us, and is essential to our existence. It purifies, cleanses, nourishes, and gives life.

Water. It doesn’t just surround us; it’s within us. Scientists estimate that it comprises 65 percent to 75 percent of the adult human body, while it’s even higher at an estimated 85 percent for infants. That’s pretty amazing when you think about it.

As vital as water is to life, it’s little surprise that it has provided inspiration and insight from ancient times to today.

Features of water

It makes up more than two-thirds (71 percent) of the Earth’s surface. It continually moves and shifts in its different forms in oceans, lakes, clouds, the air, vegetation, glaciers, and snow — which doesn’t include what’s underground.

Water has some unique characteristics. For example, while substances can take on various forms of solid, liquid, or gas, it is unusual because it doesn’t require extreme temperatures. Instead, it changes under conditions that life can tolerate.

In addition, when solids of a substance form, the atoms typically come closer together to make the substance denser. On the other hand, water molecules form rings when they freeze, causing the substance to be less thick. Thus, solid water (ice) can stay afloat while most solids sink in water.

Its unique features allow it to be everywhere and impact everything — including our bodies and health. These properties are also what give it a deeper symbolic meaning.

For instance, water is never lost; it just changes form. It “adapts” to its environment in ways that enhance the lives of all. For example, under heat, it elevates and gives rise to clouds that provide a divine vision that has moved people for millennia. And when it freezes into buoyant ice, it provides insulation for the fish and plant life that remain below.

Water continually moves and shifts in its different forms in oceans, lakes, clouds, the air, vegetation, glaciers, and snow — which doesn’t include what’s underground.
Water continually moves and shifts in its different forms in oceans, lakes, clouds, the air, vegetation, glaciers, and snow — which doesn’t include what’s underground. (Image: Jowita Dusza via Dreamstime)

Water’s importance to health

Water is common, innocuous, and essential. Like love and health, it’s easy to take it for granted—until it’s missing.

Water is the foundation of each cell, each organ, and the body as a whole. Two-thirds of the water in the body is intracellular (within cells), while the remaining one-third is extracellular. However, its concentration within the various parts of the body differs.

For example, according to studies, the brain and heart are made up of approximately 73 percent water, the skin is 64 percent water, and the lungs are 83 percent water. Even the most challenging body parts, the bones, contain 31 percent water.

In a way, water’s simplicity is part of its potency. It’s the ultimate enhancer and enabler. As such, it serves many functions in the body.

It insulates the spinal cord, brain, and other organs, lubricates and acts as a shock absorber for the joints, helps to regulate body temperature through respiration and perspiration, flushes waste and toxins from the body, carries oxygen to the cells, and helps to break food down into nutrients that the body can absorb.

And anyone who’s been in the ocean with a scrape or cut, or gargled with salt water to ease a sore throat, can attest to its ability to heal.

Keeping our bodies well-hydrated plays an essential role in memory and focus, boosting our energy and mood levels and maintaining proper blood pressure. It also helps to reduce the effects of aging, helps to keep constipation and illnesses at bay, and improves our physical performance.

But as with all things in life, balance is critical. Too much water in the body can lead to issues such as congestive heart failure, nausea, diarrhea, or low sodium and other electrolytes. Conversely, too little water — a common problem — can lead to acute kidney failure, joint pain, muscle cramping, and excess sodium and other electrolytes.

Water has a tremendous impact on our physical health. But if we slow down long enough to appreciate the wonders of water — wonders that haven’t been lost on the poets, philosophers, and spiritually enlightened of the world — the life lessons it has to teach can also have a significant impact on how we view the world, which can have a profound effect on our mental health.

Lessons from water: Let go and flow 

Water flows throughout nature in oceans, lakes, streams, creeks, and rivers. It doesn’t let things get in its way or impede its path. Nor does it resist its natural cycle of change — from its cycle of evaporation to condensation to precipitation or from changing its state from liquid to gas to solid, as the situation may require.

Just as water adapts and takes on different forms, so must we continuously let go of our current state to change and grow.

Confucius said, “As the water shapes itself to the vessel that contains it, a wise man adapts himself to circumstances.”

Change is one of the few things we can count on in life, but for many of us, just the thought of change can stir stress. Yet, if things are meant to change, no amount of resistance can stop it. If we are rigid and let our minds form fixed ideas about how things should be, then we are more apt to falter in the face of difficulty. But when we are fluid, our minds open up, and we are flexible, adapt, and grow.

When we understand that we are best served by flowing with what comes, it will be easier to let go of what was and accept what is. And when we do, we might even find that life has offered some fantastic opportunities!

Water flows all around us and is essential to our existence. It purifies, cleanses, nourishes, and gives life.
Water flows all around us and is essential to our existence. It purifies, cleanses, nourishes, and gives life. (Image: Physyk via Dreamstime)

Be strong yet gentle

“Nothing in the world is as soft and yielding as water, yet for dissolving the hard and inflexible, nothing can surpass it.” — Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching

Water takes on many forms; in those forms, it can be solid and robust or gentle and pliant. Even when it’s flowing, it can wield incredible strength. At its most still and docile, it can contain tremendous depth. Water has power and endurance amid the most challenging conditions but will remain calm as an inevitable natural state.

In people, a tendency toward calm is an attribute of good character. While water can overpower its surroundings, as in a massive tidal wave, this isn’t its nature, but a consequence of its environment. It is, by nature, humble and serene.

And yet, as the Daoist sage Lao Tzu noted: “All streams flow to the sea because it is lower than they are. Humility gives it its power. To give if the people, you must place yourself below them. If you want to lead the people, you must learn how to follow them.”

This gentleness isn’t without power. Just as a calm person can better reason with others and melt away disagreement, water can dissolve more substances than any other liquid.

Reflect

When water is calm, it can reflect a clear picture of anything it greets. It can show the observer what he might otherwise not see. But if it is turbulent or murky, then what’s reflected will be hazy and unclear.

Similarly, when our minds are turbulent — when we’re angry, resentful, vengeful, or moved by powerful emotion — we can’t reflect on ourselves and what’s happening. This makes it impossible to see a situation clearly, and our vision is distorted. When we can keep calm, we can reflect on things more precisely and accurately.

Self-reflection is always essential, but perhaps not more so than when we’re going through difficulty, when we’ve made a mistake or when someone has wronged us. But when things don’t go as we’d like, we shouldn’t complain, get angry, or become resentful. Instead, we should calm ourselves, take a moment to reflect, and see what we can learn from the situation.

Philosophers and poets have long said that what’s outside us merely reflects what’s within.

As my sister-in-law, Stacia, likes to say: “What lives in the heart comes out of the mouth.”

And in a similar vein, the Bible says, “As water reflects the face, so one’s life reflects the heart.” (Proverbs 27:19 )

Suppose something disturbs our calm, such as when someone bothers us, it may be worth asking what has moved us. Is it because we see something in them that we have in ourselves lurking in our darker depths? Or perhaps it’s to ask ourselves why it bothers us so that we reflect and purify ourselves. Maybe that’s why we notice something or feel irritated by it.

In the same way that the movement of water reveals forces beneath the surface, our reactions can reveal aspects of ourselves that may remain hidden.

By observing the way of water, we can appreciate the many benefits it brings to our physical health and the myriad of lessons it has to teach that can help our mental health.

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