Shifting from industrial clock-time to natural cycles reveals retirement as a season with its own rhythm and gifts.
Western culture imposes linear, quantifiable time—hours as units to maximize and monetize. Laozi understood time as cyclical, following natural patterns of seasons, breath, and tide. Retirement offers liberation from time-as-commodity, yet many retirees internalize the productivity mindset, replacing work hours with self-improvement schedules. The Taoist approach invites you to observe actual natural cycles: seasons, circadian rhythms, the pace of growth and rest. In retirement, you can finally align with these deeper patterns. Some days invite activity; others invite restoration. Some weeks call for solitude; others for community. Rather than imposing external schedules, cyclical thinking honors these organic fluctuations. This reframes retirement not as a fixed state to optimize, but as a season with its own appropriate activities and rhythms, reducing the pressure to maintain constant engagement or purpose.
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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