Laozi's teaching that apparent weakness and flexibility generate greater power than rigid preparation, making premature starts into strategic advantages.
The Taoist sage recognizes that the softest things—water, the uncarved block, the beginner's mind—overcome the hardest obstacles through persistence and adaptation. When you start before ready, you possess a hidden strength: flexibility. Those who wait for perfect readiness often become rigid in their preparation, unable to adjust when reality differs from plans. The person who begins tentatively, with humility and openness, can flow around obstacles that would shatter a perfectly-prepared but brittle approach. Laozi teaches that yielding is not weakness but strategic positioning. Your incompleteness becomes your advantage because it keeps you responsive, humble, and capable of rapid change. The stream that seems fragile wears away the mountain. In beginning before readiness, you access this paradoxical power—your lack of rigid expertise becomes flexibility, your uncertainty becomes openness to learning, and your incomplete preparation becomes adaptive capacity that no amount of planning could replicate.
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