Reducing tasks to their essential form prevents overwhelm-driven procrastination through radical simplification.
The Uncarved Block (pu) represents potential in its simplest state—before complexity obscures essence. Laozi suggests that much of human suffering comes from unnecessary elaboration and complication. When you procrastinate, often the task has become too complex, too loaded with expectations, too far removed from its core purpose. The Uncarved Block principle invites you to strip away the unnecessary: remove perfectionism, eliminate side quests, define the absolute minimum viable completion. If writing a report paralyzes you, the uncarved block is one paragraph. If a project feels immense, reduce it to the single next action. This isn't lowering standards; it's removing the psychological weight that creates resistance. Technology often complicates tasks with features, integrations, and options that obscure simplicity. By returning to the essential form—the uncarved block—you reveal a task simple enough that procrastination loses its grip. Complexity breeds resistance; simplicity invites action.
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