Laozi's teaching that patience and long-view thinking reveal what hurrying obscures; reframing procrastination within extended timescales and genuine priorities.
The Tao Te Ching repeatedly emphasizes patience and the long view. Rushing creates mistakes, resentment, and eventual collapse. Procrastination often reflects misalignment with your true priorities when viewed over years, not days. When you zoom out to a longer timescale, some deadlines lose power; others gain urgency. This practice invites you to distinguish between genuine procrastination (avoiding what truly matters) and wise delay (protecting what's more important). By adopting the long game, you release the tyranny of urgency. Yes, some things require momentum now. But many apparent procrastinations dissolve when you ask: In five years, will this still matter? What am I actually trying to accomplish across my lifetime? This extended perspective often reveals that your resistance contains wisdom—pointing you toward better-aligned work, values, and pace.
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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