The Taoist concept of shi (proper timing) teaches that beginning at the right moment matters more than achieving perfect preparedness.
Laozi repeatedly invoked the principle of shi—the right moment, the proper time—as more important than any external condition. This ancient Taoist insight directly challenges modern anxiety about readiness; the universe operates in rhythms and cycles, and there exists a timing to things that transcends your personal preparation level. Sometimes waiting longer only compounds unreadiness; momentum itself is a teacher that preparation alone cannot provide. In the context of modern technology and life, shi suggests that the optimal moment often approaches quickly and passes; waiting for perfect readiness means missing the temporal window when energy, resources, and circumstances align. Historical figures Laozi respected understood that a leader or creator must sense the moment when conditions become fertile, even if personally unfinished. Starting before ready becomes wisdom when understood as sensitivity to timing rather than recklessness. By honoring shi, you recognize that the universe provides openings, and your task is attunement rather than accumulation—learning to notice and enter the moment when it arrives, prepared or not.
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