The Taoist unity of being and becoming, where procrastination dissolves when you stop separating present acceptance from future completion and embrace the task as already whole.
Western thought splits being and becoming: you are not yet complete, so you must become something else through effort and time. Procrastination lives in this split—the gap between who you are now and who you need to be to complete the task. Laozi teaches that being and becoming are not separate but unified in the Tao. You are already whole. The task is not something distant you must reach but something already present that unfolds through you. When you begin from this place of wholeness rather than deficiency, the need to procrastinate dissolves. There is nothing to prove, no future self to become. There is only this moment, this breath, this chance to express what already is. Work flows not as climbing toward an imagined future but as expressing what already exists now. This shift from becoming to being creates a paradox: when you stop trying to become completed and instead rest in being complete, the work completes itself through you. Procrastination arises from the exhaustion of chasing a future; it dissolves in the peace of fully inhabiting the present moment.
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.