The Taoist embrace of paradox and deliberate not-knowing as pathways to deeper wisdom and authentic presence beyond conceptual mind.
The Tao Te Ching is saturated with paradoxes: "The useful comes from the useless," "To yield is to be whole," "Not-doing accomplishes all." Laozi taught that the Tao cannot be grasped by conceptual thinking—it must be realized through direct experience beyond words and logic. Modern mindfulness often emphasizes clear understanding, yet Taoist being-here includes cultivating comfort with not-knowing. This doesn't mean rejecting understanding but recognizing its limits. Many obstacles to presence arise from the desperate need to make sense of experience, to resolve ambiguity, to achieve conceptual closure. By practicing deliberate not-knowing—approaching situations with genuine openness rather than predetermined interpretations—you free your attention to perceive what's actually present. Paradox becomes a teacher: holding contradictions without collapsing them into false resolution trains your mind to stay present with complexity rather than flee into simplification. This is radical mindfulness: being fully here with what you cannot understand, allowing wisdom to emerge from the gaps in your knowing rather than from the completeness of your concepts.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.