Creating intentional space and boredom as essential counterbalance to technology, where children's capacity for presence and creativity emerges.
In Taoist philosophy, emptiness is not absence but potential—the space where true creation happens. Applied to technology, this means protecting unstructured time, boredom, and space from digital stimulation as actively important for children's development. Constant connectivity fills every gap in consciousness, preventing the mental silence where imagination, problem-solving, and self-knowledge arise. Children need margins of boredom—times when they must entertain themselves without digital assistance. These gaps are where resilience builds, where genuine creativity emerges, where children develop their own thoughts rather than consuming curated content. The Taoist approach treats empty time as a resource to protect fiercely, not as a problem to solve with more technology. This isn't about arbitrary screen-free time, but about conscious cultivation of emptiness as the foundation for all meaningful engagement, digital or otherwise.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.