A practical framework where attention is directed toward paths of least resistance in your environment and psyche, increasing effectiveness while reducing depletion.
Water is Taoism's primary metaphor for virtue: it flows around obstacles rather than against them, yet gradually wears away stone. For attention management, this suggests redirecting focus toward what naturally engages you rather than toward what you believe you should attend to. If a task requires constant force and resistance, it signals misalignment. The flowing water strategy asks: where does attention already want to go? What problems naturally intrigue you? What environments support deep focus without friction? By mapping the terrain of your own psychology and external conditions, you can channel attention along natural grades. This is not laziness but wisdom—recognizing that attention is most renewable when it flows with inclination rather than against it. Modern systems force attention uphill constantly. Returning to flowing water practice means redesigning work, environment, and commitments to align with your natural directions.
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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