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Daily Inspiration Quote by Zhuangzi

"We cling to our own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away"

About this Quote

Zhuangzi skewers the ego with the calm precision of someone who has watched a thousand certainties evaporate. The line opens on a recognizable human tic: we grip our point of view like it’s a life raft, as if the world’s stability depends on our being right. That “as though” is doing quiet work. It frames conviction not as strength but as a kind of nervous superstition, a private ritual to fend off chaos.

Then comes the reversal: “Yet our opinions have no permanence.” Zhuangzi doesn’t argue your view is wrong; he makes it smaller. The subtext is that the problem isn’t error, it’s attachment. Opinions are shown as weather, not architecture. The autumn-and-winter image is strategic because it’s both inevitable and unblameworthy. Seasons don’t fail; they turn. By comparing beliefs to seasonal drift, he drains the moral drama out of disagreement. Today’s zeal becomes tomorrow’s compost.

Context matters: Warring States China was an era of competing schools, political violence, and philosophical one-upmanship. Zhuangzi’s Daoist project isn’t to win the debate; it’s to puncture the compulsion to have debates serve as identity armor. The intent is therapeutic and slightly mischievous: loosen your grip, stop mistaking your current angle for reality itself, and you might finally move with the Dao rather than trying to nail it to the wall.

It’s also an early critique of ideological permanence. If your opinions will pass anyway, why sacrifice your freedom to defend them like property?

Quote Details

TopicLetting Go
SourceAttributed to Zhuangzi (Chuang Tzu). Common English translation: "We cling to our own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away." See Wikiquote entry for Zhuangzi.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Zhuangzi. (2026, January 15). We cling to our own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-cling-to-our-own-point-of-view-as-though-181/

Chicago Style
Zhuangzi. "We cling to our own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-cling-to-our-own-point-of-view-as-though-181/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"We cling to our own point of view, as though everything depended on it. Yet our opinions have no permanence; like autumn and winter, they gradually pass away." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/we-cling-to-our-own-point-of-view-as-though-181/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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We cling to our own point of view opinions have no permanence
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Zhuangzi (369 BC - 286 BC) was a Philosopher from China.

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