Recognizing that postponing focused attention creates compound interest—small deferrals accumulate into overwhelming backlog.
Taoist thought understands natural forces: water flows downhill, and deferring flow creates dams and pressure. Attention debt works similarly. Each time you defer a task requiring focus—checking email 'later,' reviewing documents 'tomorrow,' thinking about a decision 'next week'—you create an attention liability that compounds. Unlike financial debt, attention debt accrues exponentially because each deferred task remains in your awareness, creating subtle cognitive load. The practice of wu wei offers a different approach: address attention demands as they arise, but without force. This isn't about immediate response to every ping, but rather about processing demands when your energy aligns with the task. Laozi teaches that trying to hold back water creates disaster; better to let it flow through appropriate channels. Similarly, allowing attention to address tasks when naturally aligned prevents the buildup of unprocessed obligations. The wisdom here: don't defer attention demands unnecessarily. Process them in their natural season. This prevents the compounding burden that makes attention feel desperately scarce.
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