My head

The Quadrivium of Self: A Modern Ecology of Freedom

The fourfold path to harmony within the self: flow, preservation, clarity, truth.

Introduction

The Quadrivium of Self is a philosophy for living freely in a bound world — a modern ecology of being drawn from four ancient currents: Daoism, Yangism, Zen, and Cynicism. Each offers a way to move through life: to flow with nature, preserve one’s own vitality, see with clear awareness, and speak with honest defiance. Together, they form a balanced rhythm between stillness and action, solitude and expression, simplicity and truth.

This is not a doctrine but a practice — a way to remain untangled, alert, and alive amid the noise of the world. What follows is a map, not a cage: a way to return to your own natural flow.

Just as a river shapes itself through movement — calm in the valley, fierce at the fall — the self, too, moves through cycles of stillness, flow, preservation, and crash. To live freely is not to resist these shifts, but to recognise them as one continuous current: the rhythm of a life in harmony with itself.

The Fourfold Path

Water will sit in a pond/dam/lake in stillness (Zen). But as more water flows in (Dao), water must flow out (Dao). It twists and turns following a natural path while preserving itself (Yangism). When it comes to the edge, it becomes a waterfall, crashing down unapologetically onto the rocks below (Cynic).

Root (Daoist)

Guard (Yangist)

Practice (Zen)

Expression (Cynic)

Summary

I live as water does: still when stillness is right, flowing when flow is right, falling when falling is true. My life is mine, and I guard it. I return to stillness to renew. And when absurdity demands, I crash loudly against the rocks, unapologetic.

Mantra

I flow like water, preserving myself; sometimes I am stilled; sometimes I make waves.