The Taoist principle that gentle persistence and flexibility overcome rigid resistance better than willpower, transforming how you approach difficult tasks.
One of Laozi's most famous paradoxes: "Nothing in the world is softer than water, yet nothing is stronger than water against that which is hard and rigid." This applies directly to procrastination's hardness—the blocked feeling, the dread, the internal pressure. Fighting these directly reinforces them. Instead, gentleness—small steps, compassionate self-talk, tiny experiments—creates cracks in the resistance. Soft approaches include: breaking tasks into absurdly small first steps, reframing as exploration rather than performance, noticing and releasing judgment about delay itself. This isn't weakness; it's the strategic wisdom of water flowing around obstacles rather than crashing against them. The goal is not to willpower through resistance but to gradually dissolve it through persistent, flexible, compassionate attention.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.