Intentionally ignoring non-essential information to amplify what matters, based on Taoist principle that strength lies in what is absent.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that usefulness arises from emptiness: a cup's value lies in the space it doesn't fill. Applied to attention, this means strategic neglect—consciously choosing what not to see, read, or hear—becomes as important as choosing what to attend to. Attention scarcity isn't solved by managing every input; it's solved by ruthlessly eliminating inputs that don't align with your core values. Laozi would recognize this as following the nature of things: a river doesn't try to flow everywhere, it flows toward the sea. Modern attention demands we become masters of saying no, of creating zones of deliberate blindness to noise. This isn't ignorance but wisdom—understanding that attention is a directed force that becomes powerful only through constraint and specificity.
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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