Practicing strategic non-adoption of technologies as a form of environmental resistance and alignment with sufficiency.
Western progress mythology demands perpetual adoption of new technologies. Laozi teaches that knowing when to stop is wisdom. Relinquishment—the deliberate choice not to adopt technologies, even beneficial-seeming ones—is undervalued in environmental discourse. We focus on greener production but rarely examine reducing production itself. Choosing a flip phone instead of a smartphone, writing letters instead of emails, walking instead of riding in autonomous vehicles—these aren't regressive but aligned with ecological reality. The paradox: refusing a 'green' technology may be more environmentally beneficial than adopting it, because manufacturing and shipping any device requires energy and extraction. Relinquishment requires distinguishing genuine needs from manufactured desires. This practice develops the philosophical stance Laozi valued: contentment with what suffices, freedom from endless wanting, and alignment with natural limits. It's wu wei applied to consumption: not forcing yourself to use less through deprivation, but flowing naturally toward simplicity by questioning what matters.
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