The Taoist recognition that nothing is ever truly 'complete'—readiness itself cycles and evolves, making the beginning just one turn of an endless spiral.
Laozi contemplates the eternal cycling of yin and yang, seasons and growth, emergence and return. This vision recognizes that readiness itself is not a destination but a point on a cycle. You might feel ready today and uncertain tomorrow, then ready again in a different way. Starting before ready means releasing the fantasy of a single moment of complete readiness and instead honoring the natural iteration of development. Each beginning leads to new understanding, which reveals new incompleteness, which invites new beginning. This is not failure; this is life. The Taoist sage does not seek the end of cycles but dances with them skillfully. When you accept that readiness eternally cycles, the pressure of the present moment dissolves. You're not trying to achieve permanent readiness; you're entering the eternal conversation between action and learning. This perspective liberates immense energy because it removes the impossible burden of perfection. Your current incompleteness is not a deficit but an essential part of the eternal spiral of becoming that characterizes all existence.
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