Taoist metaphor that value lies in emptiness and receptivity; procrastination's delay can become a creative incubation space rather than failure.
Laozi repeatedly used the valley as wisdom's symbol—it's hollow, empty, receptive, and paradoxically where all waters gather and nourish life. Most people view procrastination's delay as wasted space, a hollow failure. The Taoist reframe: this empty time is where solutions gestate. Pressure and urgency compress; emptiness allows expansion and emergence. Instead of resisting procrastination's delay, inquire into what's actually brewing in that space. Often our psyche is working on the problem at depths our conscious mind can't access. The procrastinated task may be waiting for a creative insight, a shifted perspective, or simply for the right conditions to align. By honoring the valley—the receptive, seemingly-empty phase—you transform procrastination from self-sabotage into incubation. The task completes not when forced but when the internal preparation finishes naturally.
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.