The Taoist understanding of time as cyclical rather than linear, suggesting that starting and returning are continuous, not one-time milestones requiring perfect conditions.
Western thinking treats time as linear progress toward fixed goals, making starting a momentous event requiring ideal circumstances. Taoism views time as cyclical: seasons return, day becomes night, effort yields to rest and returns again. This cyclical view transforms how you understand starting before ready. You're not attempting a singular, irreversible launch; you're entering a cycle that will return, allowing for continuous beginning. Each cycle teaches you something, and the next cycle begins from a slightly more informed place. This removes the crushing pressure to get it perfectly right the first time. Laozi teaches return to the root as natural pattern: all things return to their source, then emerge again transformed. When you start before ready, you enter this cycle. You begin, return to rest or recalibration, and begin again. Each beginning is both first and not-first. This cyclical understanding liberates you from the tyranny of the perfect start. You can move forward knowing that readiness continues unfolding across multiple cycles, not within a single, demanding moment. Starting becomes natural repetition rather than exceptional achievement.
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.