Shift from treating attention as a limited commodity to manage, toward attention as a living resource that regenerates through rest and alignment.
The framing 'attention as scarce resource' often triggers scarcity mindset—the belief that you must ration and defend it. Laozi's Tao Te Ching repeatedly teaches that nature's abundance comes through cycles of activity and rest, fullness and emptiness. A river does not run out of water; it flows continuously because it is fed by rain and springs. Attention functions similarly: it depletes when treated as a finite bank account to hoard, but regenerates when you honor its natural rhythms. This means building restoration into your attention practice—deep sleep, true leisure, periods of purposeless time—not as luxuries but as essential maintenance. When you align with attention's natural cycles rather than forcing constant productivity, the apparent scarcity resolves. You have more attention available because you stopped bleeding it away through exhaustion and resistance to rest.
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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