Laozi's metaphor for returning to primal potential—the insight that you already contain everything needed; starting before ready means trusting this innate wholeness.
The Daodejing celebrates the 'uncarved block' (pu) as the highest state: raw, undifferentiated, and paradoxically complete. This isn't innocence but primordial wholeness. Laozi teaches that excessive refinement creates fragmentation and loss. When you delay starting until you feel perfectly ready, you're carving away at your uncarved block, creating artificial divisions between 'ready' and 'not ready,' 'capable' and 'incapable.' The Taoist path invites you to begin from your wholeness rather than your accumulated qualifications. You don't need to build yourself into readiness; you need to strip away the false divisions preventing you from acting. This concept transforms the anxiety of incompleteness into the freedom of potentiality. Your 'not ready' status isn't a deficit—it's evidence that you're still whole, still flexible, still responsive. Beginning now preserves this precious uncarved quality.
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.