Valuing your natural, unrefined state as an asset rather than a deficiency, recognizing that raw potential outweighs polished incompleteness.
The uncarved block (pu) represents wholeness before refinement, before the world shapes you into usefulness. Laozi teaches that what seems rough or unfinished often contains greater potential than carefully cultivated forms. When you fear starting before ready, you're really fearing your uncarved state. But this rawness is precisely your strength. The unrefined beginner hasn't yet calcified into wrong patterns; they remain plastic, responsive, capable of deep learning. A block cannot be concerned with being perfectly shaped before it exists—its wholeness precedes its form. In starting before ready, you protect something essential: the beginner's mind, the capacity to move without the weight of accumulated technique. Your incompleteness is not a deficit to overcome but a resource to preserve. Begin while you're still whole, before refinement narrows your possibilities.
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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