The Taoist comfort with paradox as ultimate reality, allowing you to simultaneously be unprepared and ready, incomplete and whole.
Western logic demands resolution: either you are ready or you are not. But Taoism, rooted in the dialectic of yin and yang, embraces paradox as fundamental truth. You can be simultaneously unprepared and ready. Incomplete and whole. Uncertain and committed. Laozi repeatedly uses paradoxical language because paradox is closer to reality than neat categorization. This concept liberates you from false dichotomies. You need not resolve the contradiction between 'I'm not ready' and 'I must begin.' Both are true. Hold them together. The discomfort of paradox is not a problem; it's the necessary space where real wisdom lives. Most people defer starting because they cannot bear holding the paradox of simultaneous readiness and unreadiness. But maturity is precisely this capacity to act decisively while remaining fundamentally uncertain. By starting before ready, you practice integrating paradox into action. You become comfortable with the yin-yang symbol as your inner state: light and dark, form and emptiness, knowledge and mystery, all spinning together. This integration is not confusion; it's the deepest clarity available to finite beings attempting infinite tasks.
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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