A contemplative practice derived from Taoist emptiness: cultivate mental space untouched by digital content, not by isolation but by internal boundary-setting.
Taoist meditation emphasizes emptying the mind—not through suppression but through ceasing to cling to thoughts. This creates space. In a world of algorithmic noise, FOMO anxiety intensifies because there's no empty room left inside—every mental space is occupied by notifications, updates, and the pressure to be informed. The practice isn't to disconnect entirely but to create an internal empty room: a preserve of unvisited mental space that remains yours. This might be a meditation practice, a daily walk without your phone, or a committed hour each day where no new information enters. The key isn't the duration but the commitment to protecting some internal silence from colonization. Over time, this empty room becomes your refuge. When FOMO anxiety rises, you have somewhere to return to—a space in yourself that no notification has touched, no algorithm has designed, no comparison can reach. This internal sanctuary paradoxically makes engagement elsewhere less anxious because part of you remains untouched. You're no longer entirely porous to external demands. The empty room isn't escapism; it's the necessary ground from which genuine, less-anxious presence becomes possible.
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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