Building rich offline experiences as counterweight to digital presence, making FOMO irrelevant.
Platforms succeed partly because offline life has become comparatively thin—less community, fewer rituals, diminished third spaces. FOMO weaponizes this void, making you feel that all meaning and connection now lives online. Taoist balance teaches that every phenomenon requires its opposite; yang requires yin. Rather than simply reducing digital engagement, create a thriving 'shadow platform' of offline experience—consistent practices, real communities, regular rituals, embodied activities. When your offline life is rich enough, digital experiences lose their power to induce FOMO; they become optional enhancements rather than essential connections. Start small: a weekly dinner with a friend, a consistent hobby, a neighborhood practice, a daily walk. These become your primary reality, your true social network, your actual status system. Digital platforms then become peripheral—nice for coordination, documentation, or occasional sharing, but not the substance of your life. By building this shadow reality deliberately and consistently, you make FOMO impossible; there's nowhere you're missing because you're already occupied, already belonging, already enough.
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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