Understanding life as recurring seasons rather than linear progress toward a fixed goal.
Western culture imposes linear time: progress or failure, ahead or behind, winning or losing. This creates constant comparison and measuring against others' timelines. Digital platforms amplify this by visualizing life as linear achievement—followers increasing, content accumulating, status climbing. Taoist philosophy embraces cyclical time: seasons repeat, life returns to beginnings, what falls rises again. This perspective dissolves FOMO's power because there is no single moment you can miss. If time cycles, opportunities return; if seasons repeat, what is dormant in you now will have its season. Laozi teaches returning as the movement of the Tao. When you shift from linear comparison to cyclical understanding, you stop measuring your progress against others' highlights. You recognize that their peak might be your season of rest, and that's natural. This framework releases the exhausting pressure of constant forward momentum and opens space for rest, integration, and authentic timing.
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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