The concept that emptiness and absence create function and possibility, showing how incompleteness and gaps are not flaws but essential generative spaces.
Taoist philosophy celebrates emptiness not as absence but as potential. A cup's usefulness comes from its emptiness; a room's value stems from the space within walls; a wheel's function depends on the void at its hub. This principle transforms how you perceive your incompleteness when starting before ready. Your current gaps, missing skills, and uncertain knowledge aren't obstructions—they are the very emptiness that creates space for learning, growth, and genuine connection with others. When you begin without complete preparation, you create a functional void that draws in resources, mentors, collaborators, and unexpected solutions. A finished expert with no gaps has nowhere for new insight to enter. But the 'unready' person whose void is visible becomes a magnet for support. This isn't weakness strategically deployed; it's recognition that incompleteness is itself a strength. By starting before ready, you maintain the void's generative power. The paradox deepens: filling in your gaps too completely before beginning actually diminishes your capacity to create and evolve. Embrace the emptiness as the foundation of what you'll build.
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.