Laozi's teaching that all things return to their source, and that sustainable action requires rhythms of exertion and restoration, not continuous forcing.
The final verse of the Tao Te Ching teaches that 'returning is the motion of the Tao.' All things cycle—seasons return, energy flows and consolidates, action requires rest. Starting before ready is often misunderstood as constant pushing, but Laozi's wisdom includes the return: periodically stepping back, consolidating learning, restoring energy, and reflecting before the next emergence. This prevents the burnout that comes from treating 'starting before ready' as a permanent state of unfinished striving. The practice is rhythmic: initiate, engage, learn, then return to emptiness and restoration before the next cycle. In sustainable business, it's sprint-and-reflect rather than endless sprints. In learning, it's build-test-integrate-rest rather than perpetual learning. Psychologically, it honors the nervous system's need for cycles rather than constant activation. By starting before ready while honoring the return—rest, integration, and renewal—you create a sustainable practice rather than a path to exhaustion. This makes starting before ready not a one-time heroic gesture but a way of life that includes silence, integration, and the wisdom to know when to pause and let things consolidate before beginning again.
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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