The Taoist principle that excessive striving toward readiness creates the very obstacles it intends to overcome.
Laozi observes a recurring pattern: in seeking to gain, we lose; in seeking to be strong, we become brittle; in pursuing perfection, we guarantee failure. This reverse paradox applies directly to readiness. Excessive preparation creates anxiety, perfectionism, and analysis paralysis. Each additional course, certification, or waiting period compounds the sense of insufficiency. The effort meant to build confidence erodes it. You start believing you need more, more, more—a trap with no exit. Yielding means recognizing that some threshold of readiness is actually diminishing returns; continuing to prepare produces diminishing returns while the cost of delay compounds. By beginning despite incompleteness, you paradoxically become more ready faster than through endless preparation. Real learning happens in the friction of actual engagement. Mistakes teach more than hypothetical study. By accepting the possibility of failure and starting anyway, you gain the adaptive capacity that no amount of pre-readiness can provide. Restraint becomes a form of action.
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