Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Name That Cannot Be Named: Authentic Self Online

The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao—similarly, the self that can be fully expressed online is not your authentic self.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The opening of the Daodejing states that truth cannot be captured in language or fixed categories. This principle applies directly to social media's core problem: the expectation that your authentic self can be fully expressed through profile, posts, and curated imagery. Every attempt to represent yourself online reduces your complexity to legible content. Your real self contains contradictions, private dimensions, thoughts you'll never share, and depths no algorithm can measure. The psychological damage comes partly from platforms suggesting otherwise—that sufficient self-disclosure, curation, and engagement will finally make you visible. It cannot; the very act of representation falsifies. Taoist wisdom accepts this limitation gracefully rather than fighting it. Your authentic self must remain partially unknowable, even to yourself. Rather than seeking total self-expression online, protect the mystery. Keep dimensions of yourself offline, resist the pressure to be fully legible, and recognize that the self that cannot be posted might be your truest self. Freedom returns when you stop believing you should be fully knowable or that online visibility equals genuine existence.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
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