Recognizing when you are in harmony with emerging futures versus resisting them, using felt sense as anticipatory feedback.
The Taoist concept of flow—being in the zone, moving with naturalness and ease—is not merely a psychological state but a form of anticipatory feedback. When we are in flow, we are aligned with the grain of what's emerging; when we struggle, we are resisting. Laozi teaches that the sage reads this felt sense carefully: ease signals alignment with the future, friction signals misalignment. This becomes a somatic intelligence for anticipation. Rather than relying only on external analysis, tune to your own experience: do your efforts feel effortless or forced? Are doors opening or closing? Is energy flowing or depleting? These signals often know the future before the rational mind catches up. Applied practically, this means treating burnout, resistance, and friction as data about whether your current path is sustainable. Conversely, experiences of flow—even in challenging work—often signal you're riding an emerging wave. In relationships, work, and direction, the Taoist approach suggests cultivating sensitivity to flow as a form of early warning and opportunity detection. This isn't about pursuing comfort but about aligning action with reality's momentum, making anticipation not an intellectual exercise but an embodied practice.
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