The Taoist understanding that certain moments possess natural readiness independent of personal preparation, and recognizing these requires sensitivity rather than analysis.
Taoism emphasizes that time itself has texture and quality—some moments open doorways while others close them. The sage recognizes the 'gateway moment' not through calculation but through felt attunement. When you start before ready, you're often responding to this deeper timing rather than your ego's sense of preparedness. Laozi warns against missing the season by over-deliberation. A farmer doesn't wait until they feel perfectly ready to plant; they recognize spring has arrived. Similarly, opportunities, relationships, and creative impulses arrive with their own timing. Waiting for personal readiness often means missing the natural gateway. This concept teaches you to cultivate sensitivity to what's ripe rather than imposing your timeline. Starting before ready, in this light, means trusting the moment's intelligence over your preparation checklist. It requires developing intuition about whether an opportunity is genuinely calling or merely appearing. When you align with timing rather than readiness, your effort becomes minimal and efficacy maximal—the classic paradox of wu wei.
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.