Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Return to Simplicity as Technological Detox

Strategic periods of technological minimalism that reset children's nervous systems and restore appreciation for simple pleasures.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching repeatedly returns to simplicity as the path to clarity. Laozi advocated returning to raw materials and stripped-down living as a way to perceive truth. Applied to technology, periodic returns to simplicity—unplugged days, technology-free spaces, minimalist devices—act as resets. Children saturated with high-stimulation digital content experience neural adaptation; ordinary life feels boring by comparison. Strategic detox periods restore baseline sensitivity so that simple pleasures—conversation, reading, outdoor time—feel genuinely engaging again. This isn't punishment but restoration. A week without screens often reveals to children their own capacity for boredom, creativity, and presence that technology obscures. Return to simplicity also reveals how much of their 'need' for devices stems from habit and design rather than genuine preference. Practically, this means protecting simple spaces: device-free meals, tech-free bedrooms, unplugged weekends. These aren't permanent restrictions but intentional returns that clarify what technology is and isn't, restoring children's ability to choose authentically rather than defaulting to digital stimulation.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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