Valuing silence, waiting, and uncertainty as spaces where genuine connection gestates rather than treating them as voids to fill.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that usefulness arises from emptiness: a cup is useful because of its empty interior. Social media abhors emptiness, constantly filling silence with content, notifications, and stimulation. Yet loneliness often stems from this relentless filling—no space for genuine encounter, for anticipation, for depth. Laozi's principle of emptiness suggests that the gaps between messages, the delays in response, the unrequited moments—these are not failures of connection but essential containers for it. Meaningful relationships require space: time for reflection, waiting for genuine response, silence between words. By deliberately creating gaps—not responding instantly, leaving sentences unfinished, allowing conversations to pause—we restore the rhythm necessary for real connection. This practice contradicts social media's economy, which profits from filling every void. Yet paradoxically, this emptiness doesn't increase loneliness; it deepens belonging by allowing something real to emerge in the silence rather than drowning everything in noise.
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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