Laozi's most famous metaphor applied directly: like water seeking its path, find your task's natural entry point rather than the "should" approach.
Water is Laozi's supreme teacher: infinitely soft yet irresistible, always finding the path of least resistance, yet inevitably reaching the destination. Most procrastinators attack tasks head-on, following a rigid "should" approach. You should start at the beginning, work chronologically, push through resistance. Water wouldn't do this. Water finds the natural low point, the openings, the easiest path. Applied to your procrastinated task: Where is your natural entry? Not where the task technically begins, but where your genuine interest or ease opens a door. If writing a report bores you frontally, start with the section you're curious about. If organizing feels overwhelming, begin with the corner that calls you. Your authentic interest is like water finding its path. By honoring your actual motivation rather than forcing the "correct" sequence, you build momentum. Each small genuine completion feels like progress, not punishment. Water teaches: resistance points to misalignment. Shift your approach until you're flowing, not forcing. The destination arrives naturally.
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