Laozi's metaphor of water flowing around obstacles teaches adapting your approach to meet reality's shape, not forcing a preset path.
Water doesn't procrastinate about mountains—it flows around them. The Watercourse Way is Laozi's central metaphor for how life moves: following the path of least resistance while never losing direction. Procrastination often means we've chosen a rigid path and are stuck fighting reality's contours. Maybe the timing is wrong, the method doesn't suit you, or the environment resists. Rather than pushing harder, the Watercourse Way invites flexibility. Can you approach this differently? At another time? With different tools or people? Water is supremely effective not through force but through adaptation. This doesn't mean avoiding difficult things; it means finding the current that carries you toward them. By studying how water moves through your specific landscape—your energy patterns, circumstances, and constraints—you discover a procrastination-free path that feels like flow, not struggle.
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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