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Concept
1 min read

Emptiness and Usefulness: The Power of Space

The Taoist insight that emptiness and spaciousness enable function and presence, not limitation or deficiency.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi emphasized that a cup's usefulness comes from its emptiness, not its material. A room's value comes from open space, not walls. The mind's clarity comes from spaciousness, not fullness. Western culture trains you to fill every gap—time, space, attention—yet this prevents genuine presence. True mindfulness requires cultivating emptiness: mental space where observation happens without judgment, silence where authentic listening occurs. This concept reframes what most practitioners see as problems: mind-wandering reveals the spaciousness that enables thinking; gaps in focus show the emptiness necessary for awareness. Rather than forcing constant attention-to-an-object, Taoist practice values open awareness that receives whatever arises. When you stop trying to pack your present moment with achievement, control, or stimulation, you access the generative emptiness Laozi called supremely useful. Being here paradoxically means leaving plenty of room—within attention, within sensation, within experience itself. This spaciousness is where genuine presence actually lives.

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Laozi
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