Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Returning to Simplicity: Reduction as Resource

The practice of systematically removing unnecessary input and options to preserve attention for what matters.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching celebrates the uncarved block—simplicity as the baseline. Modern attention scarcity stems partly from proliferation: infinite apps, notifications, news streams, social feeds, each competing for your finite awareness. Returning to simplicity means treating reduction as an active practice, not deprivation. This isn't asceticism for its own sake, but ecological wisdom: every input you allow into your awareness requires processing. Laozi teaches that 'the more you have, the more you're burdened.' Applied to information diet, this means: unsubscribe, mute, delete, close. Each removal is reclamation. The practice requires examining not what you're missing by simplifying, but what you're gaining: bandwidth, clarity, slower decision-making. A person with three trusted information sources and one primary project has vastly more effective attention than someone juggling twenty feeds and eight priorities. Simplicity is not limitation; it's concentration. The energy previously scattered across noise becomes available for depth.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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