Laozi's principle that apparent uselessness and incompleteness often serve purposes better than polish, relevant to unfinished beginnings.
Laozi praised the useless tree that survives because it's worthless to the carpenter; the hollow hub that enables the wheel's function; the empty space that makes the vessel useful. This inversion of value applies powerfully to starting before ready: your perceived incompleteness becomes your advantage. An unpolished project invites collaboration and feedback; a rough draft generates momentum when finished products generate only perfectionism. The useless beginner often achieves more than the impressive poser because they remain open to correction and surprise. Your "uselessness" as an unprepared starter paradoxically makes you more useful in a complex, changing world that values adaptation over rigidity. Laozi understood that the most rigid, seemingly complete things fail fastest under pressure, while the humble, incomplete, supple beginning contains infinite possibility. When you start before ready, you've embraced this principle: your rough edges aren't defects to hide but features that enable real growth.
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