Recognizing how metrics and categories that quantify your life actually obscure its meaning and fuel anxiety.
The opening line of the Tao Te Ching states: the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao. Once you name something, quantify it, measure it, you've already lost its essence. Digital culture obsesses with naming: followers, likes, views, metrics, categories, scores. FOMO intensifies because these named metrics become the measure of worth, visibility becomes success, and quantification becomes reality. But the most valuable aspects of life—presence, growth, meaning, connection—resist quantification. By practicing awareness of the unnamed—the conversations that changed you invisibly, the quiet moments that shaped you, the growth no metric captures—you reduce FOMO's power. You stop measuring your life against metrics and start valuing what can't be counted. This doesn't mean ignoring concrete reality, but rather remembering that the countable is a shadow of what can't be counted. The practice: notice what metrics make you anxious and what parts of your life exist beyond metrics. Cultivate the unnamed. A life rich in unnamed meaning cannot be diminished by named metrics.
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