Wuwei (woo-WAY) Taoist concept of a disengagement from the affairs of the world. Taoism or the School of Tao refers to a set of philosophical teachings and religious practices that are rooted in a specific and metaphysical understanding of the Chinese character Tao, here encompassing the whole processes of the Universe, considered as to be constantly changing and stemming from the diversification of...
Early Taoists recognized as the chief moral virtue the trait of wuwei – disengagement from the competitive exertions and active involvement in affairs of the world. Wuwei required that individuals refrain from advanced education (which concentrated on abstruse trivialities) and from personal striving (which indicated excessive concern with the tedious affairs of the world). Wuwei called instead for individuals to live simply, unpretentiously, and in harmony with nature.
Wuwei also had implications for state and society: the less government, the better. Instead of expansive kingdoms and empires, the Tao Te Ching envisioned a world of tiny, self-sufficient communities where people had no desire to conquer their neighbors or to trade with them. Indeed, even when people lived so close to the next community that they could hear the dogs barking and cocks crowing, they would be so content with their existence that they would not even have the desire to visit their neighbors. The Tao Te Ching (道德經, Pinyin: D Jīng, thus sometimes rendered in recent works as Dao De Jing; archaic pre-Wade-Giles rendering: Tao Teh Ching; roughly translated as The Book of the Way and its Virtue (see dedicated chapter below on translating the title)) is an ancient Chinese scripture...
More subtly, WuWei is "not doing" is the sense of not "contending, competing, arguing, ranting, boasting, invading, and winning." So you might choose to do something subtle that others would discount as nothing at all.
WuWei is not pushing, nor just standing there, but harmonizing with your partner(s) in order to dance.
It clearly shows that WuWei is not passive, but emphasizes that you should not leave your mark of effort when you try to solve a problem.