Preserve the natural, undirected quality of your attention before society carves it into predetermined channels.
The Uncarved Block (pu) in Taoist philosophy represents potential in its pure state—undifferentiated, whole, unconditioned by external demands. Applied to attention, this concept warns against allowing your awareness to be completely sculpted by external agendas: notifications, metrics, others' expectations, and algorithmic feeds. Each carved notch is attention diverted from your own questioning and discovery. Laozi valued this uncarved state because it preserves your capacity for authentic response rather than programmed reaction. Protecting some portion of your attention from predetermined channels—keeping it 'uncarved'—means cultivating time and spaces free from structured input, recommendation algorithms, and explicit demands. This unstructured attention is where genuine insight emerges, where you notice what actually concerns you rather than what you've been conditioned to care about. It is the most valuable attention precisely because it remains uncommodified and free.
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