The Taoist principle that mighty rivers begin as springs and vast forests as seeds—legitimacy through genuine beginning, not delayed scale.
Laozi repeatedly emphasizes that greatness emerges from humility, that the mightiest things begin small, and that the greatest journeys start with single steps taken humbly. A river that will move mountains begins as a trickle from a spring; a forest that shelters multitudes begins as scattered seeds. This isn't poetic consolation but actual observation of how reality works. Starting before ready means starting small, starting humbly, starting with whatever readiness you actually possess rather than waiting for some imagined grand entrance. There is no separate category called "legitimate start." Your first customer, first reader, first student, first attempt is completely legitimate because it is actual. The readiness you possess is whatever readiness you have in this moment. By beginning humbly—with a small step, a genuine attempt, an honest beginning—you establish authentic momentum. Contrast this with the person perpetually preparing for a spectacular launch that never comes. Humble beginnings contain a deeper truth: authenticity matters more than impressiveness, genuine effort matters more than apparent readiness, real connection matters more than perfect presentation.
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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