Recognizing that attention feels scarce only when we resist its natural rhythms; accepting limitation reveals sufficiency.
Taoist paradox reveals that attention scarcity is partly perceptual. When you fight against your natural attention cycles—trying to focus during low-energy hours, resisting rest, chasing multitasking—scarcity intensifies. Laozi's paradoxical wisdom teaches that by accepting limitation, we find sufficiency. Attention has natural rhythms: peaks and valleys, flow states and fallow periods. The moment you stop demanding constant peak performance and instead work with these cycles, scarcity transforms into rhythm. This isn't resignation; it's realistic assessment. A river isn't scarce in water; it flows according to season and terrain. Similarly, your attention has natural abundance when measured against realistic expectations rather than impossible industrial demands. This paradox dissolves the anxiety around 'not enough' by reframing scarcity as a signal to align with natural patterns rather than a deficit to overcome.
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