Recovering scattered attention by acknowledging unconscious impulses, compulsions, and disowned desires that drain focus.
While Taoism predates modern psychology, its emphasis on seeing reality clearly aligns with the work of recognizing shadow patterns—the unconscious habits and repressed desires that hijack attention. You can't focus when part of your mind is obsessing over something you won't acknowledge. The person who compulsively checks social media isn't lazy; they're often avoiding something uncomfortable, or seeking validation they won't admit they need. By bringing shadow patterns into awareness—noticing compulsive behaviors, acknowledging uncomfortable desires, integrating disowned parts of yourself—you recover stolen attention. This Taoist principle of clear seeing means examining your relationship with distraction honestly. Are you avoiding something? Seeking escape? Hungry for connection? Until you acknowledge these underlying needs, attention will scatter trying to satisfy them unconsciously. Integration and honest self-awareness, paradoxically, free attention by removing the drain of internal conflict.
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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