Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Returning to Simplicity: Stripping Back

The Taoist practice of eliminating excess complexity and returning to essential elements, revealing that readiness often means less not more.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Modern culture trains us that readiness requires accumulation: more skills, more credentials, more preparation, more certainty. Laozi's counter-intuitive teaching advocates elimination. By stripping back to essentials, you often discover you already possess the core required to begin. A founder doesn't need a perfect business plan—a real problem and willingness to iterate. A writer doesn't need mastery of prose—honest voice and authentic story. Returning to simplicity means identifying the true minimal prerequisites and releasing invented ones. This practice challenges the perfectionist's infinite regression: there is always something more to learn, always another way to prepare. The Taoist path starts by distinguishing real from imagined requirements. When you return to radical simplicity—one question, one person, one small action—the fog of unreadiness often lifts. Readiness reveals itself not through accumulation but through honest reduction to what truly matters for this beginning.

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Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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