The Taoist paradox that acknowledging attention's limits paradoxically expands what you can actually hold and use.
Taoism thrives in paradox: the more you grasp, the less you have; the more you acknowledge emptiness, the more fullness appears. Applied to attention, this means: the moment you stop pretending you have unlimited focus and accept scarcity as real, your actual capacity increases. This isn't motivational rhetoric—it's about honest resource allocation. When you accept that attention is finite, you stop wasting it on pretense, guilt about what you're not doing, or the illusion that you can attend to everything simultaneously. You become selective, intentional, and therefore more effective. Laozi's teaching that 'the useful comes from emptiness' suggests that acknowledging the void in your attention creates space for what truly matters. Scarcity becomes not a curse but a clarifying force.
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