Treating unstructured, undefined time as the ground state rather than a gap to fill, protecting pre-categorical awareness from the tyranny of labeled tasks.
Laozi begins the Tao Te Ching: 'The Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao.' Naming things—categorizing, labeling, putting them on lists—is useful but also a form of capture. Every task you name becomes a potential object of anxiety and focus-debt. In modern life, this manifests as the compulsion to name every fragment of time: work block, exercise slot, family time, learning session. This produces a paradoxical exhaustion—you're always accountable to some named category. A Taoist approach preserves the nameless: unscheduled, undefined time that isn't spoken for. This isn't laziness but a strategic protection of attention from total colonization. When you maintain some time that belongs to no label, no metric, no external expectation, you create space for attention to distribute itself naturally rather than constantly being allocated by will.
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