Working with the natural rhythms and seasons of time itself rather than against its grain.
Taoism recognizes time as a living force with its own natural flow, seasons, and currents. Rather than imposing our agenda uniformly across time, temporal wu wei means discerning the right timing for different actions. Laozi teaches that everything has its season: a time to advance, a time to retreat, a time to speak, a time to remain silent. In anticipating futures, this means recognizing that some opportunities emerge only when conditions ripen naturally. Forcing action against the temporal grain creates resistance and waste. The Taoist sage develops sensitivity to kairos—the opportune moment—rather than rigidly measuring chronological time. In modern life, this applies to career transitions, relationship development, and project launches. By aligning action with the natural seasons of personal and collective life, anticipation becomes less about controlling outcomes and more about recognizing readiness. This temporal attunement reduces wasted effort and increases resonance with emerging possibilities.
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.