Laozi's teaching on the limits of language: regret persists because we over-narrate the past; silence and selective speech restore its proper proportion.
The Tao Te Ching opens with "The Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao." Language fragments and fixes what is fluid and living. In regret, this manifests as endless retelling—of the story, the context, the reasons, the self-judgment. Each retelling reinforces the neural pathways of shame. Laozi suggests that what cannot be articulated fully is better left in silence, or spoken only when necessary and briefly. This is not repression but wisdom: by ceasing to narrate the past obsessively, you stop crystallizing it into a permanent story. You might speak it once to a trusted person for clarity, then release it back into silence. This practice does not require denial; it requires recognizing that constant verbal elaboration of regret is the mechanism that keeps it alive. Silence, in this context, is not avoidance but respect for the past's complexity—too large and layered for words to contain.
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