Major change emerges from small, consistent beginning actions that compound over time, not from singular grand preparation.
The Taoist worldview recognizes that transformations appear sudden but actually develop through patient accumulation. A fruit doesn't suddenly ripen; consistent sun, water, and time ripen it gradually until the moment it's ready. Starting before complete readiness allows incremental ripening to begin immediately rather than waiting for false readiness that may never arrive. Each small action—a conversation, a rough draft, a failed experiment—contributes to genuine readiness development. This approach counters the modern bias toward large, prepared actions. Laozi teaches that major transformations emerge from small, persistent acts aligned with natural processes. The person who starts writing imperfectly but consistently develops authorial voice faster than someone waiting to craft the perfect first paragraph. The company that launches a rough product and iterates develops market understanding that competitors preparing perfect launches never gain. Incremental ripening honors the temporal reality of growth: transformation takes time, and every moment spent waiting is a moment unavailable for the compounds to work their quiet power. Starting before ready initiates this natural accumulation of small actions into large results.
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