Maximum progress often requires minimum strain—the counterintuitive principle that trying harder can prevent readiness.
Taoist paradox teaches that the harder you grasp for readiness, the further it recedes. This reversal mirrors the physics of water: it flows around obstacles rather than through them. For someone starting before ready, reverse effort means redirecting energy from anxious over-preparation into receptive beginning. When you stop demanding perfection and start with 'good enough,' you paradoxically accelerate learning. Laozi observed that rigid, over-structured approaches break under pressure, while flexible, seemingly incomplete starts adapt and strengthen. The paradox operates in real time: excessive planning consumes time that could be spent doing; perfectionism delays action longer than skill gaps ever could. By embracing what feels inadequate and beginning anyway, you trigger the real teacher—direct experience. Your incompleteness becomes your greatest asset, keeping you humble, curious, and responsive rather than locked into predetermined, brittle strategies.
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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