Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Timing Beyond Chronology

Understanding readiness and ripeness as qualitative states rather than quantitative measures, where African event-time unfolds at the pace relationships require.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Chronological time—measured minutes and hours—served industrial efficiency but violates relational reality. Laozi distinguished between clock time and the time of nature: a fruit ripens when ready, not when scheduled; a child learns when prepared, not when curriculum demands. African ubuntu cultures operate similarly: conversations conclude when understanding is reached, not when time allots; ceremonies begin when all necessary people gather, not when announced; healing takes the duration it requires. This is not inefficiency but attunement to actual conditions. Imposing chronological time on relational processes creates violence: cutting short grief, rushing decisions, scheduling intimacy. Taoist philosophy honors ripeness and readiness as the true measure of timing. A meeting is punctual when all participants are present in spirit and body; a decision is timely when wisdom has had time to crystallize. Applied practice: communities develop explicit language and practices around qualitative timing—ripeness, readiness, presence—replacing clock-watching with attunement to when conditions are truly aligned.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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