Positioning yourself as receptive and open like a valley to receive knowledge, resources, and timing, rather than pushing like a mountain.
In the Tao Te Ching, Laozi frequently praises the valley—the low place that gathers water and abundance. This principle suggests that readiness isn't a fortress you build up but a receptive stance you assume. When starting before ready, adopting valley consciousness means becoming aware of what's already flowing toward you: mentors appearing, information arriving, opportunities surfacing. A valley doesn't force the river; it welcomes it. This positioning counters the Western impulse to 'command and control' your readiness through aggressive preparation. Instead, it invites you to notice what wants to move through you and where genuine resistance versus mere caution exists. By becoming the valley rather than the peak, you access resources and timing that forcing never reveals. This receptive stance often reveals you were readier than you thought—the readiness was already present, waiting for your openness to receive it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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