Energy Consuming And Saving
Energy Consuming And Saving

The Story of Hundun: Energy, Life, and the Loss of Spirit One ancient book said: "The Emperor of the South Sea was called Shu, the Emperor of the North Sea was called Hu, and the Emperor of the Center was called Hundun. Shu and Hu often met in Hundun’s domain, and Hundun treated them with great kindness. One day, Shu and Hu said, 'All people have seven openings—eyes, ears, mouth, and nose—through which they see, hear, eat, and breathe. Only Hundun has none. Let us try to bore some holes for him.' They drilled one opening each day, and on the seventh day, Hundun died.” It may hardly understand but Hundun had its own original nature — formless, lacking the seven orifices. That was its natural state. But Shu and Hu, attempting to impose human standards onto it, forcibly drilled the seven openings, ultimately causing its death. In ancient Chinese thought, Hundun symbolized a state of primal wholeness — an undivided, fo...