The advantage of starting before ready is seeing clearly—theories haven't yet obscured direct perception and authentic response.
Zen Buddhism, influenced by Taoism, speaks of 'beginner's mind'—perception unmixed with ideology. The person starting before ready possesses this enormous advantage: they haven't yet developed the elaborate mental models that filter reality. A beginner notices what experts, armored in theory, miss. Laozi celebrated the usefulness of emptiness, the clarity of an uncluttered mind. When you start before ready, you're forced into acute attention. You cannot rely on assumptions; you must sense directly. This isn't ignorance but intensity. Your incompleteness becomes perceptual sharpness. Over-preparation can calcify perception, turning reality into data that confirms prior learning rather than phenomena to be freshly experienced. By beginning, you develop what Taoists call 'deep listening'—responsiveness to what is actually present rather than what you expected to find. This clarity compounds advantages: you notice opportunities others miss, you respond quickly to changing conditions, you sense interpersonal dynamics faster than those locked in prepared narratives. Starting before ready is an investment in perception itself. The 'readiness' you gain is not more knowledge but cleaner sight.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.