The image of gu (valley or hollow) as receptive space—the practice of becoming hollow like a valley to receive and integrate ancestral knowing without ego resistance.
In Taoist imagery, the valley is supremely receptive: water flows to it, life gathers there, and it remains unmoved and humble. Gu symbolizes the receptive feminine principle necessary to hold ancestral wisdom. Most people approach their past with a full cup—preconceptions, defenses, narratives about who they should be. The practice of gu is to empty the cup, to become the valley. This does not mean passivity but rather clear listening: to family stories, to inherited trauma, to ancestral gifts you have never named. When you sit with ancestral material as a gu—open, receptive, non-judgmental—integration occurs naturally. Resistance, analysis, and judgment dam the flow; receptivity allows ancestral patterns to be recognized and metabolized. This is the feminine counterpart to active ancestral work: receiving what has been given, honoring it, and allowing it to nourish you rather than haunt you.
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