溫故知新 Old wisdom, today’s insight — ONGO
To Carry a Father's Way, Yet Walk One's Own Road
Am I too quick to discard the teaching of the one who raised me, simply because it seems old?
While the father lives, observe his intent; when he is gone, observe his conduct. To keep from changing the father's way for three years may be called filial love.
📝The Classic Answers
I do not read Confucius' words as blind imitation. He means: do not hastily erase the intent and conduct left by the one who raised you, but keep them near a while and take them in. Whether a mentor or a father, only after they are gone does their direction become visible. I often realize too late that a teaching I shoved aside in youth as outdated was my very root. It is neither living out the inheritance unchanged nor discarding it whole. Only after long carrying and digesting it can one open one's own road. Continuing and advancing are not opposites.
🌱Apply It Today
Take one teaching from someone who taught you that you once dismissed as outdated, and reconsider its meaning today.
The film is honored as an equal questioner; its plot is rendered only as a universal dilemma. The classic source is an ancient text (Public Domain), and the reflection is 100% original ONGO content.