Fu (return) teaches that attention naturally cycles back to source; honoring return cycles preserves long-term capacity.
Laozi teaches fu—the constant return to source, to rest, to simplicity. Everything that goes out must return; everything that rises must fall. Applied to attention: your focus goes out into work and must return to emptiness, to rest, to renewal. Modern culture tries to break this cycle with constant stimulation, productivity hacks, and the illusion of perpetual output. But attention that never returns depletes. The practice is honoring return: regular genuine rest (not entertainment), silence, solitude, and simplicity. These aren't luxuries or breaks from productivity—they're essential cycles that restore your capacity. A day without rest produces diminishing returns; a week without solitude fragments attention; a season without slowness creates brittleness. Rather than fighting the return cycle, build it in. Daily return: sleep, quiet, simple presence. Weekly return: one day of reduced demands. Seasonal return: extended rest. These cycles seem 'unproductive' but they're what make real productivity possible over a lifetime. Honoring return is honoring scarcity—accepting that you cannot pour out indefinitely without depletion.
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