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Concept
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Timing Over Preparation: Shi and Opportunity

The concept of shi (situational timing) that prioritizes recognizing the right moment over accumulating readiness.

Laozi
Why It Matters

In Taoist thought, shi refers to the propitious moment when conditions align naturally—not a moment you create through preparation, but one you recognize and enter. Laozi teaches that excessive preparation often misses the window when the Tao presents opportunity. Starting before ready means developing sensitivity to shi rather than checklists. A skilled sailor doesn't wait until perfect conditions; they recognize when the wind shifts and act immediately. Modern perfectionism inverts this: we prepare endlessly, missing actual opportunities. The paradox of timing is that readiness is partly an illusion—no one feels completely prepared when the moment arrives. Instead, train your perception to recognize shi: when something calls you, when resistance drops away, when momentum begins naturally. Begin then, not after three more courses or revisions.

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