The framework that attention, like all reality, naturally distributes across multiple simultaneous concerns, and scarcity arises from denying this inherent multiplicity.
In Taoist cosmology, the ten thousand things describes the infinite diversity of manifestation flowing from the Tao. Applied to attention, this concept acknowledges that you are always already attending to many things simultaneously: breath, posture, subtle emotions, peripheral awareness, memory, anticipation. Modern productivity culture falsely promises that attention can be singular and total. This creates scarcity by imposing an impossible standard. Laozi would recognize that attention naturally multiplies across contexts. Rather than fighting this, the Taoist approach accepts that some attention is always divided while optimizing the quality of primary focus. You might be writing while aware of birdsong, hunger, and time passing—and this is not a failure. Scarcity emerges from guilt about this multiplicity and the energy spent resisting it. By accepting attention's natural distribution, you free energy for genuine presence.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.