Laozi's three treasures framework reoriented toward dissolving competitive comparison at the root of FOMO.
Laozi identifies three treasures: compassion, frugality, and humility. FOMO operates through the inverse: envy, excess consumption of comparison, and pride in status. By consciously cultivating the three treasures, you create an immune system against FOMO's infection. Compassion means recognizing that others' highlighted moments are not superiority but suffering disguised as success; most viral content masks anxiety, not certainty. Frugality means valuing depth over quantity—one genuine conversation over one hundred notifications, one book over one thousand articles. Humility means accepting your particular, limited life as complete: you cannot live all lives, attend all events, or know everything. These three treasures are not virtues imposed from outside but the natural expression of someone aligned with the Tao. Practicing them daily—choosing compassion when envy arises, frugality when you reach for your phone, humility when you compare—gradually rewires your nervous system away from FOMO's compulsive patterns toward genuine contentment.
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