Laozi emphasizes timing (shi) as more important than preparation—starting before ready at the right moment is superior to waiting for perfect conditions.
The Taoist concept of shi—right timing, the opportune moment—reveals why starting before ready makes sense. Laozi teaches that missing the right moment is worse than being unprepared. A farmer plants at the season for planting, not when he feels maximally prepared; a warrior strikes at the moment of advantage, not after infinite training. Modern culture inverts this: we optimize preparation and hope the moment will wait. Often it does not. The right moment to start your project, relationship, or venture passes while you are still preparing. Laozi would ask: is being 80% ready for the right moment better than being 100% ready for the wrong (missed) moment? Starting before ready means timing your action with the season, the market, the emotional readiness of others, the emergence of opportunity. This requires a different attentiveness than preparation requires. Rather than internal focus on your own readiness, you cultivate sensitivity to external timing. Technology exemplifies this: timing a product launch matters more than perfect product completion. Many revolutionary innovations came to market imperfect but at the exact right moment. Laozi would recognize this alignment with shi—the unfolding moment itself—as the deepest form of readiness.
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