Understanding attention not as individual willpower but as embedded in designed systems and environments that guide or trap focus.
Laozi observes that individual effort means little against systemic currents; the wise person works with flows rather than against them. Applied to attention: your focus is not purely personal but shaped by designed ecosystems—apps, interfaces, social norms, physical space. The attention ecology framework treats your focus as a response to the environment you inhabit, not as a character flaw. This is liberating because it shifts responsibility from self-blame to system-awareness. If you're constantly distracted, look first at the ecology: are you in spaces designed to capture attention? Using tools optimized for engagement over service? Surrounded by constant notification? Attention scarcity is partly individual but largely ecological. This means real change requires environmental redesign: choosing different tools, creating attention-protected spaces, building communities with different norms. The Taoist insight is that you cannot force attention in a hostile ecology; you must work with natural patterns and remove impediments. Understanding your attention ecology reveals where to exert minimal effort for maximum effect.
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