The Precious Treasury of Dao and Virtue: Bai Yuchan’s Daode Baozhang (道德宝章)—A Daoist Inner Alchemy Commentary on the Dao De Jing with Ziqing’s Pointing to the Mysterious and True Words on Cultivating the Dao A living Dao De Jing—not just a book about it. Bai Yuchan (白玉蟾, Southern Song) was a master of internal alchemy (Neidan) who read Laozi as a manual of practice. His Daode Baozhang turns lines like “blunt the sharp” and “hold to the One” into direct operations for the heart-mind (xīn), original nature (xìng), spirit (shén), and qì. This edition keeps Bai’s short, gatha-like notes inline—exactly where he put them—so readers feel the verse become method. What sets this book apart Practice-first reading of the Dao De Jing: Dao and De are mapped to concrete inner work—guard, gather, loosen, return, decrease. - Authentic Daoist voice: commentary by a practitioner, not a purely philosophical gloss. (Think trail guide, not museum label.) - Original symbols preserved: Bai’s markers ○ and ⊙ are explained in detail and retained to cue cadence and attention. - Context that helps you practice: Preface, reading tips, and a closing “Final Word” tie meaning back to daily cultivation. Also included Ziqing’s Pointing to the Mysterious (紫清指玄集/篇) — concise guidance from Bai’s “Ziqing” persona on seeing through to the source. - “True Words on Cultivating the Dao” (修道真言) — distilled maxims for method and mindset. Who this book is for Readers of the Dao De Jing who want operative instructions, not abstractions. Practitioners of Neidan, Qigong, meditation, and the internal arts. Students of Daoism seeking a bridge between classic text and lived practice. This book presents a clean, reader-friendly translation and commentary that preserves Bai’s form while making his method accessible: read the line, read Bai’s cue, read the line again—then sit with it. If you’ve admired the Dao De Jing from afar, this volume brings it into your breath and day. Less self-interest, fewer desires, guard the One, soften—until action tapers into non-action and things are simply so.