Reducing complexity and commitments directly expands usable attention; less becomes the prerequisite for sustained focus.
The Tao Te Ching repeats: strip away, reduce, return to simplicity. This isn't asceticism for its own sake; it's strategic. Each commitment, tool, relationship, and decision-point competes for your attention. The person with a thousand tabs open, five projects running, and infinite entertainment options available has no attention left for anything deep. Simplification is the discipline of saying no—not occasionally, but systematically. This means: fewer apps, fewer commitments, fewer possessions, fewer choices. Each reduction frees attention. Some of this is straightforward: closing unnecessary tabs, deleting apps, declining meetings. Some requires courage: admitting you cannot do everything, narrowing your focus to what truly matters. Paradoxically, this narrowing expands you. A life of deliberate simplicity develops attention like a lens: concentrated, powerful, able to perceive detail others miss. Simplification isn't limiting; it's the path to mastery and presence in what remains.
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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