The central FOMO paradox: being offline proves presence in what matters most, dissolving the false binary of missing out.
FOMO's logic is linear: if you're not online, you're not there. Laozi dwells in paradox: the usefulness of a cup is the emptiness, not the clay. Applied to digital presence: being offline proves presence where it matters. The family dinner, the book you're absorbing, the walk where you notice light—these are the most essential presences, yet FOMO shames you for them. You experience guilt for not simultaneously existing in multiple digital spaces. This paradox of presence asks: Where do you actually exist? Your body is here. Your attention is here. Yet your anxiety pulls toward phantom spaces where your digital self might be missing something. Laozi would recognize this split as the root suffering: living nowhere fully. By fully accepting that being offline from platforms means being profoundly online to actual life, the paradox resolves. You belong most completely when you stop trying to belong everywhere. This reframing transforms FOMO's guilt into wisdom about where presence truly lives.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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