Laozi's paradoxical thinking reveals how curating identity for social media simultaneously creates and destroys the self we seek to affirm.
Laozi teaches that opposing forces define each other: the useful and useless, hidden and revealed, being and non-being. Social media self-presentation embodies this paradox—users construct idealized versions to gain acceptance, yet this construction obscures their authentic selves, ultimately preventing genuine connection. The more carefully we craft our image, the more distant we become from genuine identity, creating psychological tension and emptiness. Laozi would recognize this as the paradox of the named: the moment we define ourselves through posts and images, we constrain ourselves. The psychological cost emerges as cognitive dissonance between online persona and lived experience. Resolution comes not through perfecting presentation, but through accepting that authentic identity cannot be curated—it emerges only through paradox, incompleteness, and the willingness to be unseen.
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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