“The Natural” Way of the Tao

The recent passing of screen-legend Robert Redford got me thinking of his understated performance as Roy Hobbs in the 1984 film The Natural.

Redford as Hobbs, a mysterious baseball prodigy, embodies the Taoist practice of wu wei — the art of unforced action. Hobbs’s natural talents flow effortlessly; and when he plays ball, he flows in harmony with the rhythms of the universe. He doesn’t chase fame or fortune; he simply plays the game he loves.

Taoism teaches that, when one aligns with the Tao, life unfolds with ease. Hobbs’s journey to the major league, though interrupted by tragedy, resumes with quiet determination, not dogged ambition.

Nature as Natural Teacher

The film’s visual language, photographed by Caleb Deschanel with Barry Levinson’s direction, is steeped in nature — golden fields, twilight skies, earth-toned fashions, plus the crack of a bat in the open air.

Taoism reveres nature and its pastoral simplicity. Hobbs, a rookie to big-city corruption, finds ultimate solace and peaceful healing far from the stadium roars, farther still in the quiet countryside with his childhood love and their future dream.

Taoism urges us to live in accordance with nature, and Hobbs’s redemption is only possible when he reconnects with the natural flow.

Characters of Yin & Yang

The film’s characters are rich with duality: good and bad, youth and age, shadows and light. Hobbs’s off-field opponents — gamblers, a manipulative team owner, a blonde femme fatale — represent imbalance and greed. Iris, in contrast, Hobbs’s childhood love, symbolizes light, balance and truth.

Taoism teaches that life is a dance between opposites, that harmony arises when these forces balance out. Hobbs’s own internal struggles — tragedy and redemption, humility and ambition — mirror this Taoist tension. His final triumph is more than athletic; it’s spiritual. Hobbs opts for integrity over fame, restoring balance to his life and the game he loves.

Transcendence & the Tao

The film’s climactic moment, Hobbs’s game-winning homer, means more than victory: It represents transcendence. The ball shatters the stadium lights, raining sparks like stars, a visual metaphor for enlightenment.

In Taoism, the Tao is the eternal Way that underlies all existence. Hobbs’s final swing is a moment of pure alignment with the Tao — no thought, no effort, just being; his eyes on the ball as it cracks off his bat and sails into the sky.

What Do You Think?

Have you ever seen The Natural? What were your thoughts on Redford’s performance? Redford himself, always aligned with nature, surely followed the Tao to success.

The Tao of Fasting

Watercolor image of Papa Gringo's on a bathroom scale, showing the weight as 159.7 pounds.

There’s an old Taoist saying: “To learn the Tao, one must first fast.” Even without understanding the modern scientific benefits of prolonged fasting, such as ketosis and autophagy, and how those benefits heal the body, ancient Taoists understood the spiritual significance of not chowing down on three full squares a day.

Of Ice and Men

Ten thousand years ago, prior to the Ice Age thaw, Stone-Age hunter-gatherers went days without any substantial nutrition, without satisfying the body’s hunger for proteins and fats. Over many millions of years, however, hominid bodies had developed processes to accommodate such long droughts in dining.

Several millennia after the glacial ice caps receded, northern-Chinese Taoists intentionally skipped a few hearty meals in order to stimulate ketosis and kick-start autophagy, allowing the body to initiate its own self-regeneration, to feed off dead and abnormal cells, strengthening the sinews that remained.

Of course, such practice was packaged as preparation for sacred religious rites, preparation that repaired and revived a body not focused on digestion. During fasting periods, senses are heightened, mindfulness improves — two states needed for success when out on extended hunting expeditions.

Full of Emptiness

In Taoism, “emptiness” is not a void to be pitied but a hollow to be hailed — a space where the Tao can flow unimpeded. It is the hollow of bamboo, the pause between breaths, the momentary silence that gives music its melody. Emptiness invites receptivity, humility and, in a spiritual sense, transformation.

Fasting, in this context, becomes the ritual enactment of emptiness: a deliberate clearing of the body’s cravings and the mind’s clutter. By abstaining from food, pungent flavors, and sensory excess, the practitioner cultivates inner quietude, a waking sleep that invites spiritual cognition.

In Taoist ritual, fasting precedes communion with the divine, echoing the belief that only through emptiness can one be filled with the Tao’s subtle presence. It is a practice of becoming porous, open to the mystery of life.

Wu Wei in Action

In Taoism, wu wei — often translated as “non-action” or “effortless action” — is the art of flowing with the natural order rather than forcing outcomes. It’s not passivity; rather, it’s a deep attunement to the rhythms of life, where action arises spontaneously from harmony.

Fasting, when viewed through this lens, becomes a practice of wu wei: a gentle release of control over the body’s desires, allowing the spirit to settle into stillness. Rather than striving or resisting, the practitioner simply surrenders and lets go — of food, stimulation and excess –and, in doing so, returns to a more elemental state.

This emptiness invites clarity, receptivity and alignment with the Tao. Like river water carving mountain stone, not by force but by flowing persistence, fasting in Taoism is a quiet surrender that opens space for surprising discovery. It is a way of becoming light, porous, and attuned to the subtle currents of being.

How About You?

Have you had any past experience with fasting? I lost about five pounds by skipping approximately ten meals last week and simplifying all the meals I did eat. Please share your experience in the comments.

Birthday Portrait: 8/25/1930 Sean Connery

A shoulder-up illustration of Sean Connery as James Bond 007. Bond wears a tuxedo and holds a long-barreled black gun up against his cheek.

At first glance, Sean Connery’s James Bond doesn’t appear to symbolize the Tao. 

Done up, always dapper; prone to flashy gadgets, shaken martinis, and high-stakes espionage: Connery’s Agent 007 seems too self-initiated, too action-prone to embody the easy-going rhythm of the Tao.

That Connery Cool

Actually, it’s Connery’s own natural poise that cools Bond’s fiery adventure — that reels in all that secret-agent energy and brings it back to center, where all its antsy potential slowly simmers, burning like an oven roasting ice.

That equilibrium, no doubt, is thanks to Venus having passed through Libra ninety-five years ago today, the day Connery was born in Edinburgh.  When Venus orbits into Libra — the sign of elegant balance — the planet of love and romance steams with graceful charm. 

Smooth-Talking Bond

As James Bond, Connery’s Mars in Gemini exudes a quick and quippy charisma, one that smartly neutralizes bad guys, that smoothly triumphs over all the bad girls.  His witty words cut like a blade, like an infamous slap across the face.

Though gone from us since 2020, Sean Connery’s big-hearted Jupiter in Cancer still warms our amused attention. His dangerous, casino-calm grin still lingers — a reminder that, even in the world of espionage, the Tao remains forever constant, forever controlled, forever flowing free.  

Celebrity Astrology

Curious about your favorite celebrity’s astrological chart and how it effects their character? Let me know in the comments.

Hello World!

I’m Papa Gringo.

For the past quarter century, I’ve been living in San Francisco where I teach college writing and dabble in drawing and sketching. 

Now, an inch or two from retirement, I’m wondering what comes next.

What adventures and discoveries might follow my mid-life career? 

Of course — nobody knows till they take the journey.     

So come along with me!  Let’s see what unfolds! 

Let’s do this together!

Along the way, we’ll chat about Zen and all things Taoist. 

Together, we’ll discuss old movies, review sidewalk-library books, and examine the impact of western astrology.

Consider this site as my virtual hut in the woods. 

Come inside and have a seat by the fire.   

Let’s share some mugs of steaming tea.

~ Papa G.

PS: Please say hello by clicking on “Leave a Comment” up above the photograph. Your questions and suggestions will inspire future blog posts.