The Taoist paradox that what appears useless or unfinished is protected from destructive interference and competitive pressure.
Laozi teaches that the twisted tree survives while the straight tree is cut for lumber; the useless branch is spared. When you start before ready, your project appears unfinished and unglamorous—characteristics that paradoxically protect it. You're not yet a threat to established competitors, not yet visible to those who would co-opt your work. Your visible unreadiness filters out shallow interest while attracting genuine collaborators. This hidden strength allows you to develop organically without the pressure of premature exposure. The useless or apparently incomplete nature of your beginning gives you freedom to experiment, fail, and iterate without reputational cost. A published work attracts criticism; a work-in-progress attracts mentorship. An expert facing challenge must defend expertise; a beginner can simply learn. Laozi suggests that strength often lies in what appears weak or useless to conventional eyes. Your unreadiness is actually camouflage. As your work develops its utility and strength, it becomes visible and vulnerable—but by then it has roots. Starting before ready means starting in relative obscurity, which is its own protection. This principle reframes unreadiness from vulnerability into strategic advantage.
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