The Zen-Taoist metaphor that perceived barriers to starting dissolve when you stop viewing readiness as a prerequisite gate to pass through.
The gateless gate is a Zen koan that reveals how obstacles exist primarily in perception. You imagine a gate between unreadiness and readiness, but this gate has no substance—it's purely conceptual. The gateless gate teaches that you're already on the other side; the only barrier is the belief that a barrier exists. Applied to starting before ready, this dissolves the artificial waiting period you create. What specifically blocks you? Usually it's abstract: more confidence, better skills, clearer direction. But these abstractions keep you perpetually on the wrong side of an imaginary gate. Laozi would say that the readiness you seek is available now, but you don't recognize it because you're fixated on an idealized version. The gateless gate invites you to walk through: begin now and discover that the obstacle was never real, only the idea of an obstacle. This doesn't deny real challenges, but it separates genuine difficulty from phantom readiness requirements. The sage moves through the gateless gate by simply moving, recognizing that waiting is the only true obstacle.
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