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Returning to the Root: Beginning Dissolves the Origin Story

The Taoist practice of returning to source simplicity, recognizing that your 'origin story' of unreadiness often matters less than immediate re-beginning.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching teaches 'returning to the root' (gui gen) as the path to understanding: the sage looks back to source, where complexity arose from simplicity. Many people remain paralyzed by origin stories—narratives about why they're unprepared: childhood trauma, past failures, lack of credentials, missed opportunities. These stories, while perhaps containing truth, become chains preventing present action. The Taoist practice of returning to root means dissolving these accumulated narratives and remembering your fundamental nature before the story began. In this return, you encounter something simple and whole that isn't waiting to be ready—it already is. This doesn't deny real challenges but contextualizes them as part of the surface foam while returning attention to the still deep water beneath. Beginning before ready paradoxically requires this return: you start not from your story of unreadiness but from this simpler, source-level presence. By beginning now, you interrupt the story's power and reconnect with authentic presence. The origin story dissolves not through denial but through returning to what you actually are before the story wrote itself.

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