Reducing the attentional cost of self-concern and ego maintenance through contemplative insight.
Taoism shares with Buddhism the insight that a solid, separate self is illusion. Most attention depletion comes not from external demands but from the internal machinery of self-protection, self-promotion, self-doubt, and identity maintenance. The ego constantly monitors: 'How am I perceived? Am I safe? Am I enough?' This background computation runs continuously, draining attention like malware. By seeing through the fiction of a rigid self—through meditation, philosophical reflection, or direct experience—you disable this costly background process. Attention becomes available. This doesn't mean selflessness or dissolution but the freedom to act, engage, and perceive without the ego's constant moderating presence. Laozi teaches this as returning to the unborn state, before the self-concept crystallized. In practice, contemplative work that loosens the ego's grip gradually releases attention from its bondage. The result: a lighter, more fluid presence that responds naturally without the exhaustion of self-management.
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