Applying gentle persistence and flexibility as superior to rigid preparation and forceful readiness.
One of Laozi's central insights holds that softness ultimately overcomes hardness—water dissolves stone, flexibility survives where rigidity breaks. The fully prepared person becomes brittle, committed to plans that may not survive contact with reality. The person starting before ready remains supple, able to bend without breaking when circumstances shift. This principle invites you to question whether your readiness preparation has actually hardened your approach, making you less responsive. Taoist strategy teaches that yielding often accomplishes more than forcing: the martial artist who gives way redirects opponent's force, the diplomat who listens advances further than one who insists. When starting before ready, embrace softness as strategic advantage. Your incompleteness creates flexibility; your unfinished plans allow adaptation. Rather than viewing your unreadiness as weakness, recognize it as the necessary softness that will ultimately triumph over rigid competitors. This reverses conventional thinking: you begin not despite being unprepared but because incompleteness offers resilience that over-preparation destroys. Softness and readiness become opposites; choose the former.
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