Laozi's principle that less is more applied to smartphone features: strategic removal and constraint as paths to genuine power and freedom.
The Tao Te Ching teaches that simplicity is strength. In a smartphone ecosystem obsessed with feature accumulation, this suggests a revolutionary practice: subtraction. De-featuring is the art of removing capabilities, disabling notifications, uninstalling apps, and constraining access to restore clarity. Most users approach simplicity by adding mindfulness apps, productivity tools, and intentionality frameworks—more solutions layered onto the problem. Laozi would recognize this as adding complexity to cure complexity. True simplification means fewer notifications, fewer apps, fewer options, fewer temptations. A phone with ten essential functions accessed with ease exceeds one with a thousand features half-disabled by settings. This de-featuring mirrors the Taoist sculptor who removes stone to reveal the statue already present. For the smartphone user, this means occasionally deleting the app that promised wellness, disabling the feature that promised productivity, and discovering that less capacity paradoxically enables greater presence.
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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