Pu—the uncarved block—represents attention before categorization, where presence exists prior to labels, restoring wholeness to fragmented awareness.
Laozi's uncarved block—pu—symbolizes consciousness before it fractures into subjects, objects, and judgments. In our attention crisis, we mistake fragmented awareness for reality: we label experiences as 'productive' or 'wasteful,' creating artificial scarcity. But before such divisions, attention is whole and unlimited. The Taoist sage cultivates return to this primordial state, attending without the filtering machinery of concepts. This doesn't mean abandoning thought but recognizing thought as one expression of attention rather than its master. Modern attention depletion stems partly from constant categorization: we attend while simultaneously evaluating whether our attention matters, whether we're focused 'correctly,' whether time spent feeds productivity metrics. The uncarved block dissolves this doubling of consciousness. By practicing attention that precedes naming—noticing without judgment, observing without agenda—we access the original wholeness that makes attention feel abundant rather than scarce.
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