Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Shadow Ancestor Practice

A Taoist-informed meditation recognizing that rejected or unknown ancestors manifest as internal conflicts and unconscious patterns.

Laozi
Why It Matters

What we deny about our lineage doesn't disappear—it becomes shadow, operating in darkness where it shapes us most profoundly. Laozi's wisdom about the unnameable applies to family secrets, shame, and the stories we refuse to tell: they become more powerful, not less. The Shadow Ancestor Practice involves turning conscious attention toward the relatives we've disowned, forgotten, or never known. These figures live in our blind spots, driving compulsive behaviors, fears, and attractions we can't explain. By acknowledging rather than rejecting them—sitting with the difficult ancestor in meditation, speaking their name, listening to what they might teach—you integrate their presence and reclaim the power they unconsciously wielded. This isn't forgiveness of harm; it's the practical recognition that every ancestor, including those we judge harshly, shaped the conditions that made us possible. In Taoist terms, you're restoring balance by including what was cast into darkness. When shadow ancestors are welcomed and witnessed, their destructive influence transforms into usable wisdom.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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