The practice of periodic withdrawal to reconnect with inner continuity, essential for preventing social media's fragmentation of identity.
Taoist practice emphasizes cyclical return: yang activity alternates with yin rest, engagement with withdrawal. Social media enforces constant presence, eliminating the yin phase necessary for integration and self-knowledge. Loneliness intensifies when we lose connection to our inner ground, becoming dependent on external validation for identity. Laozi teaches that returning to source—periods of deliberate offline silence, solitude in nature, stillness—restores our sense of wholeness. This isn't digital minimalism as punishment but as medicine: withdrawing from the network allows fragmented attention to consolidate. Regular offline practice (daily, weekly, seasonal) functions as anchor points, moments where the self exists prior to performance. From this grounded center, digital engagement becomes optional rather than compulsive. We can then move between online and offline worlds with autonomy, using platforms intentionally rather than being used by them. This rhythm transforms loneliness from chronic isolation into periods of necessary solitude, a vital distinction.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.