Systematically reducing information inputs to conserve attention bandwidth for what genuinely matters.
The Taoist virtue of simplicity translated into modern life means radically reducing information consumption. Most people treat information like an all-you-can-eat buffet, assuming more input equals more knowledge. But attention is finite. Every news cycle, every social feed, every email subscription claims a piece of your awareness. The simplicity audit asks: what information do I actually need? What feeds genuine understanding versus manufactured urgency? Laozi would keep the necessary few and eliminate the rest. This isn't ignorance; it's discernment. By unsubscribing, muting, unfollowing, and blocking, you create an information diet that nourishes rather than depletes. The paradox is that knowing less broadly often means understanding more deeply. With attention conserved through radical selectivity, you develop real expertise in areas that matter rather than scattered awareness of everything. This practice directly addresses scarcity by reducing demand on the supply.
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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