Mapping contributor journeys as flowing water, where pathways emerge naturally from ecology rather than predetermined structures.
The Tao Te Ching repeatedly uses water as metaphor for virtue: it flows to the lowest place, nourishes all equally, and carves canyons through persistence rather than force. Open source contributor pathways should flow like water rather than follow carved channels. Traditional funnel models—from user to contributor to maintainer—assume a fixed topology. Instead, Laozi suggests designing contribution ecology so that pathways emerge naturally where energy gathers. A developer might contribute documentation first, then code, then governance; another might skip directly to infrastructure work. The Taoist approach removes artificial barriers, maintains minimal structure, and allows self-organization. Communities that force contributors through predetermined paths create friction; those that offer multiple entry points and bidirectional flow enable natural participation. This means rethinking onboarding as *inviting emergence* rather than *directing flow*, trusting that contributors will find their level and role organically.
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