A practice of attention as reflection rather than grasping—holding focus lightly, receiving what presents itself without forcing interpretation.
Laozi uses mirror imagery to describe the ideal mind: it reflects what is present without distortion, preference, or grasping. Most Western attention training emphasizes focus as a beam—directed, concentrated, aimed at a target. The Taoist alternative is attention as a mirror: open, receptive, clear. This distinction matters profoundly for attention as scarce resource because forced focus actually exhausts attention, while receptive attention regenerates it. When you approach a task or conversation as a mirror rather than a lance, you're not imposing your agenda but allowing information and meaning to show themselves. This paradoxically allows deeper understanding and better decisions because you're not filtering through preconception. The mirror mind doesn't mean passivity; it means active receptivity. You're fully present and alert but not tensely focused. Practically, this transforms how you read, listen, and work: rather than hunting for specific information, you open to what the material wants to show you. This reduces the strain-fatigue cycle because you're not fighting resistance but moving with what's actually there. The practice involves noticing where your attention is tight and grasping versus where it flows and receives.
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