Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Gateless Gate: Moving Through Apparent Obstacles

The paradox that what appears as a barrier to starting actually dissolves when approached with proper understanding.

Laozi
Why It Matters

In Zen Buddhism (influenced by Taoism), "gateless gate" describes the paradox where the barrier exists only in perception. Applied to starting before ready, the readiness requirement functions as a gate that vanishes when examined. What seems like an impenetrable barrier—lack of credentials, insufficient knowledge, missing resources—dissolves when you step through it. The gatekeepers are internal: your own doubts and assumptions about what readiness requires. Laozi taught that obstacles exist at the level of names and concepts; at the level of reality, they're often illusions. The gate is gateless because there was never a real barrier, only a story you accepted. Starting before ready means recognizing this: your unreadiness isn't real resistance but a mental construction. When you move through it, you discover it was never solid. This understanding transforms fear into curiosity, and the apparent obstacle becomes the very means of your initiation.

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