Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Watercourse Way: Following Natural Paths

Discovering the path of least resistance by observing where energy naturally flows, rather than imposing predetermined routes.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi used water as the ultimate teacher of wu wei: it doesn't force but finds the way, yielding yet ultimately powerful. In approaching tasks, procrastination often signals that you've chosen a rigid, uphill path. The watercourse way asks: Is there a more natural approach? What if you explored sideways, paused to let understanding deepen, or broke the task into micro-currents rather than forcing it whole? This isn't about finding shortcuts but about genuine intelligence—water's way is efficient precisely because it works with terrain, not against it. When procrastination grips, step back and observe: Where is resistance occurring? What would flow look like? Sometimes this reveals a different sequence, a different collaborator, or a different framing that releases stuck energy. By practicing the watercourse way—responsive, adaptive, flowing—you prevent the friction that calcifies into procrastination patterns.

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