Recognizing how self-monitoring and self-judgment create the very procrastination they attempt to overcome.
The Taoist sage practices ziran, or self-so-ness—allowing things to unfold according to their nature without constant interference. Applied to procrastination, this means examining how your inner critic, self-surveillance, and judgment actually amplify resistance. When you internally police yourself ('I should be working,' 'I'm being lazy,' 'I must do this'), you create a fractured internal state: one part commanding, another part rebelling. Laozi teaches that this inner interference prevents natural functioning. Paradoxically, by releasing self-judgment and accepting your current state without commentary, you remove the very friction that perpetuates procrastination. This isn't complacency—it's removing the internal saboteur. When you can be authentically present with resistance without fighting it, when you can work without simultaneous self-criticism, the task becomes surprisingly doable. This concept invites a revolutionary shift: what if the solution to procrastination isn't more self-discipline but less self-interference?
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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