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### Book:matter of mimicking the fashions of youth—that is equally worthy of |
### Book:laughter. Rather your mind must constantly adapt to each circumstance, |
### Book:even the inevitable change that the time has come to move over and let |
### Book:those of younger age prepare for their ascendancy. Rigidity will only |
### Book:make you look uncannily like a cadaver. |
### Book:Never forget, though, that formlessness is a strategic pose. It gives you |
### Book:room to create tactical surprises; as your enemies struggle to guess your |
### Book:next move, they reveal their own strategy, putting them at a decided |
### Book:disadvantage. It keeps the initiative on your side, putting your enemies in |
### Book:the position of never acting, constantly reacting. It foils their spying and |
### Book:intelligence. Remember: Formlessness is a tool. Never confuse it with a |
### Book:go-with-the-flow style, or with a religious resignation to the twists of |
### Book:fortune. You use formlessness, not because it creates inner harmony and |
### Book:peace, but because it will increase your power. |
### Book:Finally, learning to adapt to each new circumstance means seeing |
### Book:events through your own eyes, and often ignoring the advice that people |
### Book:constantly peddle your way. It means that ultimately you must throw out |
### Book:the laws that others preach, and the books they write to tell you what to |
### Book:do, and the sage advice of the elder. “The laws that govern circumstances |
### Book:are abolished by new circumstances,” Napoleon wrote, which means that |
### Book:it is up to you to gauge each new situation. Rely too much on other |
### Book:people’s ideas and you end up taking a form not of your own making. |
### Book:Too much respect for other people’s wisdom will make you depreciateyour own. Be brutal with the past, especially your own, and have no |
### Book:respect for the philosophies that are foisted on you from outside. |
### Book:Image: Mercury. The winged messenger, |
### Book:god of commerce, patron saint of thieves, |
### Book:gamblers, and all those who deceive through |
### Book:swiftness. The day Mercury was born he invented |
### Book:the lyre; by that evening he had stolen the cattle of |
### Book:Apollo. He would scour the world, assuming |
### Book:whatever form he desired. Like the liquid metal |
### Book:named after him, he embodies the elusive, |
### Book:the ungraspable—the power of formlessness. |
### Book:Authority: Therefore the consummation of forming an army is to arrive |
### Book:at formlessness. Victory in war is not repetitious, but adapts its form |
### Book:endlessly…. A military force has no constant formation, water has no |
### Book:constant shape: The ability to gain victory by changing and adapting |
### Book:according to the opponent is called genius. (Sun-tzu, fourth century B.C.) |
### Book:REVERSAL |
### Book:Using space to disperse and create an abstract pattern should not mean |
### Book:forsaking the concentration of your power when it is valuable to you. |
### Book:Formlessness makes your enemies hunt all over for you, scattering their |
### Book:own forces, mental as well as physical. When you finally engage them, |
### Book:though, hit them with a powerful, concentrated blow. That is how Mao |
### Book:succeeded against the Nationalists: He broke their forces into small, |
### Book:isolated units, which he then could easily overwhelm with a strong |
### Book:attack. The law of concentration prevailed. |
### Book:When you play with formlessness, keep on top of the process, and |
### Book:keep your long-term strategy in mind. When you assume a form and goon the attack, use concentration, speed, and power. As Mao said, When |
### Book:we fight you, we make sure you can’t get away. |