The Taoist image of the uncarved block representing pure potential, teaching that sometimes procrastination reflects over-sophistication rather than laziness, and that naturalness precedes effort.
The uncarved block, or pu, is a central Taoist symbol representing the state before unnecessary modification, when potential remains undirected but alive. Most procrastination interventions operate through adding complexity—new systems, accountability structures, motivation techniques—but Laozi suggests that genuine power often lies in simplification back toward naturalness. You procrastinate not because you lack tricks but because you've lost touch with the basic, unadorned desire and capacity to work. The uncarved block principle invites returning to this natural state: What would you naturally do if no one judged you, if no system constrained you, if you simply acted from authentic interest? Often procrastination dissolves when you release elaborate self-management systems and touch what actually calls you. This doesn't mean abandoning structure entirely, but holding it lightly, always returning to the question: what is natural here? What emerges if I stop carving and simply allow? This reorients effort toward revealing your authentic engagement rather than imposing external discipline.
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.