The Taoist concept of pu (uncarved block) suggests that before memory divides experience, consciousness was whole; nostalgia seeks that lost wholeness through the wrong door.
The 'uncarved block' represents original undivided nature before thought and categorization fragment experience. Infancy contains this wholeness—before memory, before self-narrative, before nostalgia itself becomes possible. As we develop language and narrative, we fragment reality into past, present, future. Nostalgia paradoxically yearns for this pre-nostalgic wholeness while being caused by the very division that made nostalgia possible. Laozi teaches that wholeness cannot be recovered through the mind's divisions; it must be accessed through present presence. Many nostalgic feelings represent an intuition of this lost unity, but chasing it through memory deepens the fragmentation. The concept's power lies in recognizing that the wholeness we seek isn't located in the past but available now through wu wei—releasing the mental activity that created fragmentation. Nostalgia's function is signaling that wholeness matters; its limit is thinking memory is the path back.
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.