Work with biological and natural cycles rather than imposing uniform attention schedules on fluctuating human capacity.
The Taoist sage observes natural cycles—seasons, day and night, tides—and moves with them rather than against them. Modern productivity culture ignores our actual attention cycles: circadian rhythms, ultradian cycles of focus and rest, seasonal variation in energy. We impose uniform demands on fluctuating capacity, creating artificial scarcity. Laozi would recognize this as resistance to the Tao's natural flow. Honoring attention's natural rhythms means acknowledging that focus varies across hours and seasons, that forcing identical output during low-capacity periods wastes effort. This isn't an excuse for inconsistency but an alignment with reality. Some minds peak in early morning, others late evening; some creative work flows in spring, analytical work in darker months. By tuning attention practices to individual and seasonal rhythms—rather than forcing constant peak performance—we access naturally higher capacity with less strain. This requires honest observation of our own patterns and the humility to work with nature rather than against it.
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