Ancient agricultural wisdom shows readiness is secondary to seasonal timing; sometimes starting imperfectly aligned with opportunity matters more.
The Taoist farmer doesn't wait to be perfectly prepared before planting season arrives—the season is the determining factor. Timing operates at a larger scale than individual readiness. Laozi teaches attunement to natural rhythms and cycles that supersede personal preference or preparation level. Starting before ready often means recognizing that the window of opportunity has its own timing independent of your comfort. A business idea's market readiness may have a season; a creative movement may require early participation to influence its direction. The ancient farmer's calendar teaches discrimination: some things require strict timing (planting season), others permit flexibility (personal skill development). Modern life obscures these natural cycles with constant availability, but the principle remains—there are kairos moments when starting imperfectly, on-time beats waiting for chronological perfection. The farmer's wisdom invites you to ask: what is the actual timing requirement here, beyond my internal sense of readiness?
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