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We suggest you turn to the Tao Teh Ching:

63

Succeed in the magician's wu-wei: Accomplish seemingly do-nothing.
Attend seemingly to no-affairs. And do completely without ado. What runs,
acts without action, does without doing,

So let's taste without tasting. Taste the flavourless. Taste the
flavourless without tasting. Find flavourless flavour.

Whether it's big or small, many or few, requite hatred with virtue.
Dao can make the small great and the few many, can requite injuries with
some decent deeds. But prepare for the hard while it's still easy. Deal
with it while it's still easy. Deal with the great or big while it's
still small.
In governing your kingdom everything hard must be dealt with while it's
still easy. The hard has to be dealt with while still very easy. All
the great (ones and great problems) of the world are to be dealt with
while they're yet small. Everything great must be dealt with while it's
still small.

Therefore the wise man never has to deal with the great; and so gets
greatness. He never strives for the great, by this the great is had.
So great undertakings shall start with what's small.

But again "Who makes rash promises surely lacks. Who lightly makes a
promise, can find it too hard to keep his faith. And light assent inspires
little confidence. Who takes things very easily is surely in for dealing
with more difficulty in the end. So "many easies" means many a hard. In
other words, who makes light of many things should find many difficulties.

From all this even the wise man regards things as hard, but he also
knows how to make the easy difficult. For that reason he very seldom
meets with difficulties. [Uha.]
     -- tr. T. Byrn