Water's nature is to flow forward without hesitation, navigating around obstacles—a model for moving through gaps in readiness with adaptability rather than resistance.
Laozi uses water as the supreme teacher: soft yet powerful, adaptable yet persistent, flowing downward while eventually reaching the ocean. Water doesn't wait for conditions to be perfect; it moves with what is. Applied to starting, the river principle means you flow forward, navigating around the obstacles of unreadiness rather than smashing through them or waiting for them to disappear. Each barrier becomes a teacher in course-correction. When you lack one skill, you develop another; when one approach fails, you find the next. This is radically different from waiting until all obstacles are removed or you're strong enough to overcome them directly. The river doesn't say, 'I'll advance when I'm prepared to punch through every rock.' It flows, accepts its current form, and works with gravity and momentum. You begin your project, your conversation, your initiative, and when you encounter gaps in readiness, you adapt your approach. This fluid responsiveness generates wisdom that no amount of preliminary study provides. You become like water: soft, persistent, and unstoppable.
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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