Understanding that readiness has seasons—some external conditions are genuinely unripe while others merely feel uncertain—and learning to distinguish them.
Taoist thought is deeply seasonal and cyclical, recognizing that certain times are naturally suited for germination, growth, harvest, and rest. This concept addresses a real tension in 'starting before ready': some conditions are genuinely unripe (spring snow won't grow crops), while others merely feel uncertain due to fear or perfectionism. The Taoist sage develops sensitivity to actual season versus imagined barrier. Do you lack a crucial collaborator or merely feel alone? Is market timing genuinely wrong or do you fear customer rejection? Has the technology not matured or do you fear learning it? True readiness consideration asks: what seasonal conditions must genuinely exist? Often fewer than we imagine. When you identify those true prerequisites—the market signal, the enabling technology, the financial runway—assess them honestly. If they exist sufficiently, your season is now; waiting wastes the open window. If they genuinely don't exist, waiting is wise. This discernment between actual seasonal constraints and fear-based hesitation is central to starting before ready—proceeding when your season has truly begun, not waiting for a perpetually distant ideal season.
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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