Guiding how practitioners allocate mental attention across multiple practice modalities without creating fragmentation or effortful juggling.
The Dao, or Way, in Taoist philosophy describes natural patterns of flow and distribution—how water fills spaces, how energy circulates through systems, how resources naturally distribute without central control. Applied to contemplative practice, this principle suggests that attention naturally flows toward what serves growth, but technological interfaces often force artificial prioritization and create decision fatigue. A contemplative platform following the Dao of attention distribution would observe which practices practitioners naturally return to, when they seek guidance versus when they need solitude, and how their interests evolve—then gently support these natural patterns rather than mandating rigid practice sequences. Laozi teaches that the best systems guide without directing, suggest without commanding. This means designing adaptive pathways where the platform learns each practitioner's natural attention patterns and creates conditions for that attention to deepen without fragmentation. When attention flows naturally like water seeking its level, practitioners experience sustained engagement without the forcing or willpower that eventually exhausts contemplative effort.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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