Laozi's teaching on returning to source describes how attention naturally cycles, and mindfulness means completing these cycles rather than fragmented distraction.
Laozi teaches that all things return to their root—not as failure, but as natural completion. Your attention naturally cycles through engagement and rest, focus and openness. Modern mindfulness often fights against these natural rhythms, trying to maintain constant focus. Instead, returning to the root means honoring the cycle: full presence in activity, then return to stillness, then emergence again. This concept explains why continuous forced concentration actually fragments presence. When you're truly here, you're also available for natural transitions. Technology disrupts these cycles with constant stimulation that prevents return. By understanding attention as cyclical rather than linear, you can be present within natural rhythms rather than against them. This paradoxically deepens presence—not through rigid control, but through alignment with how awareness naturally functions. Each return to center strengthens your capacity to be genuinely here.
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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