Recognizing natural rhythms and seasonal timing rather than imposing arbitrary deadlines, aligning action with actual readiness.
Laozi observed that the river never hurries, yet reaches the sea. Modern culture imposes synchronized timelines that ignore individual and contextual rhythms—breeding procrastination as resistance to false pacing. The Taoist approach examines: Is this the right season for this task? Am I forcing against genuine constraints? Are the conditions ripe? Procrastination often signals temporal misalignment—attempting growth work during depletion, creative projects under false urgency, or tasks requiring energy you haven't built. By understanding the river's current—your actual capacity, the task's natural unfolding, external conditions—you stop fighting timing and start collaborating with it. This doesn't excuse avoidance but redirects it into wisdom: perhaps the delay teaches you something about prerequisite work, necessary rest, or better sequencing. True timing dissolves the friction that creates procrastination.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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