The Taoist image of water finding its path around stone, teaching how to work with rather than against inner obstacles.
Water is Laozi's supreme teacher: it never struggles against a stone but finds the path around it, under it, through it, wearing stone smooth over time. Procrastination often emerges when you meet an internal obstacle—fear, shame, doubt, fatigue—and try to push through it directly. The force creates counter-force. Water teaches a different approach: identify the obstacle precisely, then find the path around it. If perfectionism blocks you, can you write badly on purpose? If authority triggers you, can you reframe as self-directed play? If the task feels isolating, can you work with others? If the deadline feels artificial, can you create internal rhythm instead? This isn't avoidance but intelligent yielding. Like water seeking its level, your work has natural paths; they are rarely straight. By studying what actually blocks you and creatively flowing around that specific obstacle—not through willpower but through wisdom—you discover that resistance becomes a map to your path rather than a wall. The work moves forward, not through force, but through hydraulic inevitability.
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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