Using Taoist inversion to identify the minimum viable perfection needed by imagining the work already complete.
Taoism teaches through reversal and inversion—by examining what you're avoiding, you illuminate your true path. For perfectionists, working backward from a completed state clarifies which details truly matter. Imagine your project finished, satisfying its actual purpose: what's genuinely necessary for that completion? Often, perfectionist effort targets invisible improvements—refinements no one will notice, polish no one will measure. By reversing your perspective and asking 'what does done actually look like?' you identify superfluous effort consuming disproportionate time. This practice transforms perfectionism from demand-driven to purpose-driven. You finish not because the clock says so, but because the work has reached its essential completion. Laozi's principle of reversal shows that perfectionists often chase the opposite of completion—endless revision cycles that prevent delivery. By clearly defining what 'done' means, you stop chasing ghosts and reclaim the temporal freedom that comes from purposeful completion rather than perfectionist anxiety.
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