What seems like falling behind might be wisdom; Laozi's paradoxical knowing teaches that the direct path often leads astray.
Laozi teaches paradoxically: those who appear to be losing are often gaining, those who rush ahead often fall behind. This inverts linear progress narratives that fuel FOMO. Social media quantifies achievement—followers, milestones, status—creating perceived fast lanes and laggards. FOMO whispers that you're falling behind, choosing wrong, missing the optimal path. But the Taoist sage knows that straightness is illusion. The most direct route often misses the essential terrain. By seeming to lag, you gain perspective. By declining to race, you often arrive at better destinations. This doesn't justify passivity; it invites trust in a crooked path that navigates your actual terrain rather than predetermined highways. When you release the anxiety of the perceived fast lane, you notice your authentic direction. You might skip trendy platforms, miss viral moments, decline social pressure—not from rejection but from alignment. The crooked path specific to you leads somewhere more meaningful than generic optimization. Releasing the illusion of a singular, measurable path directly dissolves FOMO's anxiety.
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