Contrasting natural cyclical attention patterns with the attention economy's demand for perpetual exponential growth and constant escalation.
Nature operates in cycles: seasons, circadian rhythms, attention itself naturally ebbs and flows. The attention economy demands linear exponential growth—each quarter must exceed the last indefinitely. This mathematical impossibility forces escalation. As natural attention saturation approaches, platforms manipulate psychology to create artificial demand. Laozi taught alignment with natural cycles rather than forcing linear growth. Applied to attention: sustainable engagement models work with natural rhythms rather than against them. Your attention capacity follows cycles—some days deeper, some shallower. Platforms ignore this, demanding constant maximum engagement. The practice becomes recognizing and defending natural attention rhythms against artificial expansion demands. This means accepting that some weeks will have less engagement, that some projects deserve fallow periods, that deep attention cannot be sustained indefinitely. By returning to cyclical thinking, we resist the perpetual growth machine. The paradox: platforms pursuing exponential growth ultimately destroy the attention resource itself through exhaustion.
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