Taoist teaching on reversion—returning to source—suggests that periodic digital withdrawal heals rather than harms connection.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that all things revert to their source, that completion cycles back to beginning. Applied to digital life, this suggests that continuous forward motion—endless scrolling, accumulating followers, chasing metrics—is inherently exhausting and isolating. We need reversion, a returning to source: offline time, digital silence, face-to-face presence. Paradoxically, modern social platforms discourage this cycle—they're designed for endless forward momentum without natural return. Loneliness intensifies when we never revert because we never restore ourselves. Laozi would recognize this as imbalance: like the Tao's cycle of creation and return, our attention needs cycles of engagement and withdrawal. Implementing this practice means: regular digital sabbaths, planned detoxes, intentional offline periods. These aren't punitive but restorative—returning to unmediated presence, direct relationship, and silence. When you return to social media after reversion, you return with renewed attention and clearer discernment about authentic connection versus compulsive engagement.
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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