Mental capacity consumed by feeds; psychological renewal requires emptying the mind of algorithmic noise.
Taoist philosophy prizes emptiness not as void but as fertile potential—the usefulness of a cup comes from its emptiness. Social media inverts this: platforms flood consciousness with content, comparison, and stimulation until no space remains for genuine thought, rest, or creativity. The psychological cost is relentless: anxiety, decision fatigue, and the inability to be bored enough to dream or reflect deeply. Laozi teaches that the sage returns to emptiness to access wisdom; nothing can be added to a full mind. Reclaiming mental emptiness on social media means deliberately creating gaps—not just breaks, but genuine unstructured time where no content fills the void. This practice counters the psychological addiction to constant input and the implicit belief that an empty moment is a wasted one. By embracing boredom and silence, users recover the capacity for insight, presence, and the kind of deep satisfaction that no feed can deliver.
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.