Returning to simple, unadorned action strips away elaborate systems that paradoxically enable procrastination through complexity.
The uncarved block (pu) represents wholeness before fragmentation. Modern productivity advice often carves tasks into elaborate systems—color-coded schedules, motivation hacks, gamification—that introduce friction and create elaborate reasons to delay. Laozi teaches that the uncarved block has inherent completeness. Begin with what is simplest: what is the actual task, minus narrative? Can you do one element for ten minutes, without tracking, apps, or systems? Procrastination thrives in complexity; simplicity starves it. By returning to direct engagement with tasks—the block before carving—you remove the cognitive overhead that enables delay. This isn't laziness but radical efficiency: one breath, one action, one moment. The elaborate system often becomes the procrastination itself, a sophisticated form of avoidance dressed as preparation.
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