By the roadside, I picked up a discarded plastic bag and threw it into a nearby trash bin. It's something within my power, just a little bend of the waist and it's not tiring. Every spring and summer, in Tianjin, there are often days of sand and dust weather. When the wind blows, plastic bags fly all over the sky; it's quite a sight. The reasons are many, including over-development, environmental degradation, inadequate governance, and more.
A few years ago, on a business trip, I encountered an interesting incident in Shenyang.
On a bus, a little boy around four or five was sitting by the window with his mother next to him. The mother was peeling an orange for the boy to eat, and the boy's hands were full of orange peels.
"Throw it away, it's dirty to hold it in your hand," the mother said.
"We can't make the bus dirty, we need to protect the environment," the boy replied.
The mother opened the window: "Then throw it outside."
The boy looked at his mother, hesitated for a moment: "We can't throw it outside."
"Why don’t you throw it outside?" the mother asked.
"We just can't," the boy replied.
"Why not?" the mother asked.
"Because the Earth will hurt," the boy said.
The passengers around all laughed at this, and his mother also asked with a smile, "Who told you the Earth will hurt?" The boy lowered his head, "Nobody told me, I just feel it myself." Until they got off the bus, the boy was still clutching the orange peels in his hand.
"The Earth can hurt." I was thinking about the boy's words all the way, such a wonderful sense of spirituality.
When everyone is born into this world, they carry some instinctual spirituality. As they grow up, from school to society, this is gradually lost. This boy will also grow up. In a few years, he will enter school. Whether he becomes an excellent student or a troubled youth, will he still remember the orange peels in his hand?
I think one of the practical significances of awakening the Yi Bodies and understanding balance is to open our minds, letting us learn to get along with others, with society, and with this World of Xiang (Manifestation).
I Pick up roadside trash and throwing it into trash bins, pack up trash when traveling, sort household garbage, switch off corridor lights when not in use, consciously reduce consumption of disposable products, and so on. These are all within my power, and I can do them better now than before.
There's no profound wisdom in this, but I often think of the boy's words: the Earth will hurt.
Yi refers to the information from high frequency civilization that this book transmits.
Yiology is a means of practice of the information of Yi on the Earth.
Yi is not to make you believe, but to teach you how to question!