Recognizing that technology adoption follows natural cycles, and wisdom involves knowing when to embrace new tools and when to return to simpler methods.
Laozi teaches that all cycles move from simplicity to complexity and back to simplicity—a dynamic equilibrium. Applied to technology in children's lives, this suggests that healthy development involves cycles rather than permanent states. A child might adopt digital tools for specific purposes (research, connection, creation), then cycle back to analog methods when those serve better. Rather than treating this as contradiction, recognize it as natural rhythm. Young children benefit from simplicity—basic materials, limited tools, unstructured time. As they mature, selective complexity adds value. Adolescents might benefit from digital tools for expression, communication, and learning. Wisdom involves knowing which tool fits which task and season. The debate often assumes a permanent answer: technology is always good/bad. Instead, this framework suggests flexibility and attunement. Sometimes the simplest approach—a paper notebook, face-to-face conversation, outdoor play—serves the child best. Sometimes the sophisticated digital tool opens new possibilities. The sage parents help children develop comfort moving fluidly between simplicity and complexity, tools and their absence, recognizing both as valuable aspects of a whole life.
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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