The Taoist void or emptiness as a productive practice: creating space away from social media to restore genuine presence and inner resilience.
In Taoism, emptiness is not absence but potential—the uncarved block waiting to receive authentic experience. The Tao Te Ching celebrates the usefulness of emptiness: a cup's value lies in its empty space, a room's livability in its vacant floor. Digital loneliness often stems from a cluttered, stimulated mind unable to be present with itself or others. Laozi suggests that strategic emptiness—deliberate time away from feeds, notifications, and algorithmic content—restores the psychological space necessary for genuine connection. This is not ascetic rejection but tactical restoration. By spending time in digital emptiness, users recover their capacity for depth, attention, and unmediated presence. They rediscover the value of boredom, silence, and unmeasured time with single individuals. This emptiness becomes a refuge that paradoxically fills the void that compulsive scrolling creates, transforming solitude into genuine restoration rather than alienation.
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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