Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Stillness at the Center of Digital Motion

Cultivating anchored inner quiet in children despite technological stimulation and information overload.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Taoist sage finds stillness at the center of motion, like the pivot at the hub of a wheel. Technology creates constant motion: notifications, updates, feeds, streams. Children increasingly live in this spinning motion, their attention pulled outward perpetually. Yet Laozi taught that wu wei requires returning to the still center—the place of presence from which authentic action emerges. A child constantly stimulated by screens lives in peripheral attention; their center never settles. This creates not freedom but fragmentation. Teaching children to cultivate inner stillness doesn't require rejecting technology; it means establishing practices and spaces where motion stops. Meditation, nature time, creative play without documentation, conversation without devices nearby—these create moments when the wheel slows. A child who learns to return to their still center can use technology from that grounded place rather than being swept away by it. They develop what might be called technological sangfroid—the ability to engage with screens without being captured by them. This stillness becomes the real protective factor, more effective than any screen time limit. The technology debate focuses on external controls; the Taoist approach develops internal anchoring. A child rooted in their own quiet center naturally moderates screen time because they have something deeper to return to.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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