Restoring unbroken attention in a system designed to interrupt it: flow as antidote to the anxiety of constant context-switching.
Laozi describes the Tao as a continuous, unobstructed flowing. The algorithm fragments this into millisecond interruptions—notifications, auto-play, infinite scroll—creating what neuroscience confirms as chronic attention fragmentation. This fragmentation is itself a cause of loneliness: we cannot truly connect when our attention is scattered. Flow state, where consciousness merges with activity, is impossible under algorithmic pressure. Taoist wisdom teaches that obstacles to natural flow create stagnation and suffering. Applied here, reclaiming flow means establishing practices that resist interruption: designated offline time, single-focus engagement with individuals rather than feeds, deep asynchronous conversation. When we return to unbroken attention with others, even briefly, the quality of connection deepens dramatically. The loneliness of social media partly stems from never achieving the psychological state where real intimacy becomes possible—that state of undivided, flowing presence.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.