Understanding natural rhythms and cycles to time decisions, commitments, and relationship phases in alignment with deeper patterns.
The I Ching and Taoist texts emphasize that time moves in cycles, not lines. Different seasons and phases demand different responses. In East Asian professional and social life, rigid sequential thinking creates costly mistakes: pushing for promotion during organizational retrenchment, deepening intimacy when someone's family needs their primary attention, or maintaining old relationships past their season. Laozi teaches observing where you are in the cycle—beginning, maturation, decline, renewal—and adjusting your strategy accordingly. This dissolves frustration and face-loss from fighting natural phases. When you recognize that withdrawal is sometimes correct, that waiting is sometimes action, that relationship cooling is sometimes necessary, you stop blaming yourself or the other person. Time becomes an informant rather than an enemy. Strategic timing replaces forcing, and outcomes align with deeper natural patterns.
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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