Why does waiting to *feel* ready often stall movement altogether? There’s a subtle assumption hiding there. https://dualisticunity.com/how-some-people-keep-moving-forward-even-when-they-feel-unmotivated/

seen from Malaysia
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Why does waiting to *feel* ready often stall movement altogether? There’s a subtle assumption hiding there. https://dualisticunity.com/how-some-people-keep-moving-forward-even-when-they-feel-unmotivated/
Even a flawed story structures perception. What patterns persist when imagination fills gaps? https://dualisticunity.com/why-the-mind-prefers-a-bad-story-to-no-story/
The discomfort of no story is tolerated less than the distortion of a bad one. What does this reveal about attachment to certainty? https://dualisticunity.com/why-the-mind-prefers-a-bad-story-to-no-story/
Attachment to story often prevents seeing what is. What clarity emerges when narrative is suspended? https://dualisticunity.com/why-the-mind-prefers-a-bad-story-to-no-story/
When understanding becomes a race, presence is often the first thing left behind. That tradeoff is easy to miss. https://dualisticunity.com/zen-and-the-art-of-speedreading/
There’s a moment everything keeps returning to—not to fix it, but to notice it without movement away. https://dualisticunity.com/the-moment-everything-keeps-returning-to/
Recognizing the mind’s need for story allows space for observation. What emerges when comfort is released in favor of presence? https://dualisticunity.com/why-the-mind-prefers-a-bad-story-to-no-story/
The mind prefers a bad story to no story because certainty feels safer than the unknown. What emerges when narrative is released? https://dualisticunity.com/why-the-mind-prefers-a-bad-story-to-no-story/