Understanding social media platforms as cyclical systems with natural rises and declines, aligned with Taoist concepts of time and change.
Laozi perceives time not as linear progress but as cyclical flow—expansion and contraction, emergence and dissolution. Applied to social media history, this reveals platforms not as permanent monuments but as temporal phenomena. MySpace, Vine, Snapchat Stories—each rose through cultural moment and receded as attention shifted. Rather than viewing platform decline as failure, Taoist perspective recognizes natural cycles: nothing maintains peak intensity indefinitely. Wise social media practitioners align with these rhythms rather than resist them, migrating where energy naturally flows, creating content suited to each platform's lifespan and character. This framework liberates creators from anxiety about eternal relevance, allowing them to inhabit each moment fully, understanding that adaptation and acceptance of change reflect deeper wisdom about how digital culture actually evolves.
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