Deliberately creating digital silence mirrors the Taoist void—the fertile emptiness from which creativity and peace emerge.
Taoism reveres emptiness not as absence but as potential. The empty cup can be filled; the crowded mind cannot learn. Social feeds condition us to fear the blank screen, the absence of notification, the moments without content. This fear directly generates anxiety: we fill silence compulsively rather than inhabiting it. The Empty Feed Practice is a deliberate return to digital void—periods where you don't check, scroll, or refresh. This emptiness is not punishment but cultivation. In silence, the nervous system downregulates. The constant background hum of social comparison and pseudo-urgency finally stills. Laozi teaches that in emptiness, the Tao becomes apparent. Applied here: in digital silence, you discover what you actually want, what you genuinely care about, who you truly are without the mirror of others' validation. This practice interrupts the addiction cycle while honoring emptiness as productive, fertile, and necessary. Void is not loss; it is space for becoming.
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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