Recognizing that perfect readiness never arrives; instead, certain moments open naturally—and the real skill is recognizing when that gate presents itself.
The gateless gate represents a Zen concept aligned with Taoist timing wisdom: there is no final barrier to cross, no ultimate threshold of readiness. Every moment is simultaneously the wrong time and the right time. Rather than seeking permission from your readiness, the practice involves developing sensitivity to temporal flow. Some moments hold momentum; others resist. Starting before ready means becoming attuned to when the gate opens—not when you achieve completeness, but when conditions align. This requires releasing the belief that readiness is a destination and recognizing it as a process. The Taoist sage doesn't wait for favorable conditions; they develop the perception to see which conditions already contain favorable elements. You begin when you notice the subtle opening—a conversation, a problem needing solving, curiosity stirring. These small gates appear constantly. The skill is recognizing them and stepping through, incompleteness and all.
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.