Laozi's metaphor of the pu (uncarved block) applied to breaking procrastination by reducing tasks to their essential simplicity.
The uncarved block (pu) represents wholeness and potential before unnecessary complexity is added. Procrastination thrives when tasks feel over-engineered, multi-faceted, or laden with perfectionist requirements. Laozi would suggest returning to the essential kernel: what is truly needed, without ornament or excessive planning? Often we procrastinate not on the actual task but on the elaborate version we've imagined. By stripping away unnecessary steps, conditions, and perfectionism, you reveal the simple action beneath. A project becomes 'write one paragraph' rather than 'create a masterpiece essay.' This simplification restores the uncarved block's natural readiness. You move from overwhelm to clarity, from complexity-paralysis to elemental action. The practice honors Taoist wisdom that subtraction often precedes progress.
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