Protecting children's innate desire to explore and learn by not over-directing their technology use toward predetermined educational outcomes.
In Taoism, the "uncarved block" (pu) represents original simplicity and potential before conditioning shapes it. Children arrive naturally curious about the world, including its digital dimensions. Yet when adults instrumentalize technology as an educational tool—apps for math, screens for learning—we risk carving away genuine exploration in favor of predetermined outcomes. The child's authentic question—"How does this work? What can I create?"—transforms into "Complete this lesson." While educational value isn't wrong, there's something lost when curiosity becomes colonized by curriculum. Laozi valued simplicity and allowing natural unfolding. This suggests protecting space for undirected technological exploration: a child experimenting with a camera or programming tool for its own sake, following tangents, making "mistakes" that spark insight. The paradox is that constrained exploration often produces deeper learning than forced education. By preserving the uncarved block—the child's capacity to play, question, and discover without adult agenda—we honor both their nature and their relationship with technology as something genuine rather than instrumental.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.