A paradox where beginning teaches what you need to know, inverting the logic that preparation must precede action.
Conventional wisdom says prepare thoroughly, then act. But Laozi's philosophy reveals a deeper causality: action itself generates the understanding necessary for right action. When you start before ready, you enter a feedback loop where each attempt teaches what preparation alone cannot. This is reverse causality—the effect (doing the thing) retroactively creates the conditions (knowledge, skill, clarity) that seemed prerequisite. Technology exemplifies this: products launch in beta because user interaction reveals what no planning session could predict. Your confusion before starting is not a problem to solve; it's the necessary friction that will sharpen your thinking. Laozi emphasizes that the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao—some knowledge only comes through participation, not contemplation. By starting before ready, you submit to this paradox: your action becomes your teacher. What you cannot know beforehand becomes evident through doing. This inverts anxiety into curiosity about what the journey will reveal.
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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