Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Watercourse Way: Following Flow

Laozi's metaphor of water finding its path teaches how procrastination dissolves when you stop resisting the shape of your task and follow its natural contours.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Water doesn't procrastinate; it flows around obstacles without judgment or delay. Laozi used water as nature's perfect teacher—it follows the path of least resistance while still reaching its destination. Procrastination arises when we mentally construct rigid paths: 'I must do this now, in this way, with this intensity.' Water suggests a different approach: What is the actual shape of this work? What are the real obstacles? Where is the genuine resistance? By observing the terrain of your task like water observes a landscape, you find pockets of natural movement. Sometimes you work directly; sometimes you circle, gather resources, or wait for conditions to shift. The Watercourse Way teaches that following the contours of reality is faster than forcing straight lines. Procrastination softens when you stop demanding your path be different from what it naturally is.

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Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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