Shifting children's relationship with technology from passive consumption toward purposeful creation and agency in the digital world.
Laozi distinguishes between hollow consumption and purposeful action—between being moved by external forces and moving from one's own center. Most children's technology use follows the consumption model: endlessly scrolling feeds designed to extract attention, playing games optimized for compulsion, watching content selected by algorithms. This passivity mirrors the opposite of wu wei—not effortless right action but effortless surrender to external stimulation. Laozi invites reorientation toward purposeful engagement: children creating rather than consuming, making rather than watching, coding rather than scrolling, building communities rather than performing for audiences. This doesn't mean banning consumption—rest and entertainment have value—but inverting the ratio so that technology becomes a medium for children's creative agency. A young person learning music production, writing stories, designing games, or building for an audience they care about experiences technology as extension of their will rather than replacement for it. Purpose transforms technology from master to tool, from time-drain to expression of self.
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