Laozi's strategic principle that minimal, indirect action often achieves more than direct force—applicable to how you initiate ventures.
The Daodejing teaches that aggressive force creates resistance; subtle, indirect action flows around obstacles. 'The softest thing in the world overcomes the hardest.' This applies to starting before ready: rather than a grand, demanding launch that requires absolute confidence, a quiet, minimal beginning creates less friction and allows natural growth. A small pilot program teaches more than elaborate planning; a soft announcement invites feedback rather than demanding validation; a tentative beginning permits course correction. Laozi illustrates this through water: it never attacks the stone but eventually wears it away through persistent, gentle presence. Starting before ready, through reverse psychology, means beginning so modestly that failure carries minimal cost and iteration feels natural rather than shameful. This subtle approach also paradoxically accelerates learning—small actions generate real feedback faster than large plans generate hypothetical validation. In technology, it explains the success of beta launches and iterative development; in life transitions, it describes how quiet commitment to small daily practices builds transformation without drama. The Taoist principle here: start so small, so indirectly, with such lightness that you're already learning before you notice you've begun.
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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