The Taoist paradox that readiness often emerges as a result of beginning, not a prerequisite—inverting conventional preparation logic.
Western logic typically demands readiness before action: prepare, then execute. Taoism inverts this sequence. Laozi observes that the path reveals itself through walking, not through map study alone. Readiness is not a static state you achieve beforehand but a dynamic competence that develops through engagement. This reversal dissolves procrastination built on perfectionism. You begin with 70% understanding, and the remaining 30% emerges through direct contact with reality. Each attempt teaches you something no amount of theory could. In technology and innovation, this principle explains why minimum viable products outperform over-engineered launches. By starting, you create feedback loops that rapidly increase your actual readiness far faster than hypothetical preparation. This concept transforms 'starting before ready' from recklessness into wisdom: you're not ignoring preparation, you're recognizing that real preparation happens during, not before.
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