Laozi's reference to the infinite multiplicity of tasks and desires; wisdom lies in radical subtraction, revealing what truly matters beneath overwhelm.
The Taoist phrase "the ten thousand things" evokes the overwhelming plurality of possible actions, desires, and obligations. In modern life, this multiplicity is literal: email, notifications, social media, endless opportunities and demands. Procrastination often masks a deeper issue—not laziness but the paralysis of too much possible. Laozi's solution is radical subtraction: What is the *one* thing that matters most now? Not ideally, not according to others' priorities, but for you in this season? By ruthlessly narrowing focus to what genuinely serves your core purpose, you dissolve the decision-paralysis that feeds procrastination. This isn't about productivity optimization; it's about existential clarity. When you eliminate the noise of ten thousand lesser demands, the path becomes clear. Action that aligns with your essential direction flows naturally, requiring little willpower.
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