Discovering the natural pathway and rhythm within each task by observing its inherent structure rather than imposing external deadlines.
The Tao, or Way, is the underlying pattern within all things. Every task contains its own tao—a natural sequence, pace, and unfolding. Procrastination arises when we impose arbitrary deadlines and methods that fight this inherent rhythm. Laozi teaches observation over control: watch how the task naturally wants to unfold. Some work requires incubation before action; some reveals itself only through beginning; some needs interruption for integration. By attuning to your task's tao, you align effort with its actual structure. Ask: What are the natural phases of this work? Where does resistance indicate misalignment rather than laziness? What pace allows quality and flow? This shifts procrastination from rebellion into feedback. You become a student of the work itself, discovering its rhythm rather than imposing yours, transforming friction into fluency.
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.