Using screen-free periods to restore attention capacity through deliberate mental space.
The Taoist concept of emptiness—sunyata—describes how void creates potential. Applied to screen time, this means understanding that mental emptiness isn't loss but restoration. Continuous screen exposure fills cognitive space with external input, leaving no room for consolidation, meaning-making, or genuine thought. Research on attention restoration theory shows that natural environments and screen-free time literally restore depleted attentional resources. Laozi wrote that usefulness comes from what is not there—a room's utility depends on empty space. Your mind operates identically: insights emerge in silence, memory consolidates during non-use, and creativity flourishes when external input ceases. The Taoist sage didn't fear emptiness; they cultivated it. Strategic screen breaks—genuinely screen-free time without replacement stimulation like podcasts or music—create the cognitive void necessary for insight. Walking without your phone, sitting without digital input, or sleeping without bedside screens allows your brain to process, integrate, and reset. This isn't productivity loss; it's the essential maintenance that enables sustainable focus and original thought.
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.