Children inhabit presentness more fully than adults; Taoist wisdom honors this capacity as spiritual attainment rather than developmental lack.
Laozi valued the uncarved block—raw, present, undivided. Children naturally dwell in this state: five minutes feels like an hour; yesterday and tomorrow barely exist. Rather than training children into future-orientation and clock-time, Taoist perspective suggests their present-centeredness is a spiritual gift worth protecting. This 'eternal now' is not immaturity but a glimpse of how consciousness flows when unbound by anxiety about past and future. Modern culture pushes children into temporal fragmentation—schedules, anticipation, regret. The paradox Laozi illuminates: children who preserve their capacity for presence develop stronger judgment, creativity, and resilience than those chronically anxious about time. By honoring rather than interrupting this natural presence, parents align with the deeper rhythm children already embody, allowing them to gradually incorporate future-awareness without losing their grounded spontaneity.
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