Pu, the state of undifferentiated potential, as a model for restoring attention before it fragments into endless competing demands.
Pu, the uncarved block, represents consciousness before it splinters into distraction. In Taoist thought, civilization carves away our natural wholeness, and attention suffers the same fate—fractured into notifications, obligations, and manufactured desires. Laozi suggests that returning to simplicity restores what was always whole. For attention as scarce resource, this concept invites you to recognize that fragmentation itself is the real scarcity. You don't lack attention; you've allowed it to be divided into pieces too small to be useful. Reclaiming Pu means periodically stepping back from all demands and requirements, returning to a blank slate where attention is undirected and unified. This isn't meditation passivity but a reset to coherence. Practically, this means regular periods—a morning without agenda, a walk without purpose—where you permit attention to exist in potential rather than locked into predetermined channels. This restores the substrate from which genuine, powerful focus can emerge.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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