BCIs require practitioners to develop acute proprioceptive awareness of their own neural activity, inverting the usual outward focus of attention.
Taoist meditation emphasizes returning awareness inward—observing one's own vital energy without manipulation. BCI users must develop similar metacognitive skill: awareness of their own neural states as they occur. This inverted gaze—attending to the brain attending to the world—creates a feedback loop where consciousness examines its own mechanisms. Unlike traditional technology use, which projects attention outward onto screens and tasks, BCIs demand that operators cultivate sensitivity to internal mental patterns. Laozi teaches that the observer and observed are one; in BCIs, this unity becomes literal. Users learn to notice subtle shifts in focus, emotional tone, and intention before they manifest as action. This develops both neuroscientific understanding and contemplative depth. The skill set resembles Taoist neigong—internal cultivation through attention itself.
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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