Understanding work and rest as natural cycles of return rather than linear progress, reducing perfectionist guilt about breaks.
Laozi teaches that all things return to their source—seasons cycle, energies ebb and flow, and the path of wisdom is cyclical rather than linear. Perfectionism demands relentless forward progress, creating guilt about rest and shame about cyclical energy patterns. Yet human capacity, attention, and creativity genuinely operate in cycles. You cannot sustain peak performance indefinitely; cycles of engagement and renewal are not failures but biological reality. By understanding work and rest as natural return cycles rather than linear progression, you eliminate the perfectionist guilt that turns necessary recovery into sources of shame. A break isn't procrastination; it's return. An energy valley isn't laziness; it's the necessary trough before the next crest. Laozi teaches that cycles are more powerful than forced linearity because they align with how life actually operates. By honoring your genuine cycles of engagement and renewal, you paradoxically accomplish more meaningful work over time than through relentless, linear perfectionist effort that inevitably leads to burnout and diminished capacity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.