Reduce the volume of digital commitments and content streams to align with natural temporal rhythm and ease time anxiety.
Laozi teaches that simplicity is supreme—the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao. This applies powerfully to time anxiety. Modern FOMO stems partly from trying to consume infinite content streams and maintain unlimited social connections. The Taoist approach is radical simplification: fewer apps, fewer accounts, fewer 'must-follow' feeds. This isn't asceticism but strategic reduction to what genuinely matters. By narrowing your digital surface area, you reclaim temporal sovereignty. You stop time-splitting across twelve platforms and instead develop deep engagement with a few meaningful spaces. Laozi would recognize this as aligning with natural rhythms—the seasons have fewer than infinite variations, yet they suffice. Applied to FOMO, temporal simplicity means acknowledging that you cannot and need not track everything. This acceptance itself dissolves anxiety. The paradox: less input creates more presence, more satisfaction, and paradoxically better awareness of what truly matters.
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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