A Zen/Taoist concept that barriers to beginning are illusions, and starting before ready means recognizing no external gate exists.
The gateless gate is a paradox: a gate that isn't actually a gate, suggesting that perceived barriers to entry are often self-imposed or imaginary. In Taoist understanding, we create elaborate prerequisites for beginning—degrees, approvals, perfect conditions—when the gate itself never existed. Laozi taught that the useful part of a cup is its emptiness, and the useful part of a room is its openness; similarly, the useful part of readiness is the absence of demanding conditions. When you start before ready, you pass through the gateless gate: you recognize that you've been waiting for permission or completion that no external force actually requires. This concept liberates beginning from the paralysis of gatekeeping. The gate guards nothing; it only exists in your mind as a reason to delay.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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