Returning to unmediated human connection like the metaphorical uncarved block, questioning what social platforms have carved away from natural belonging.
Laozi's uncarved block (pu) represents original wholeness before civilization's carving and shaping. Applied to loneliness, it asks: what did human connection look like before digital mediation? What essential elements have been carved away? Social platforms promise connection but deliver its hollow performance—metrics replacing presence, algorithms replacing mutual choice, strangers replacing community. Laozi suggests that deep belonging emerges from unmediated presence: face-to-face contact, local commitment, inconvenient proximity. The uncarved block practice involves periodically stepping back from digital connection to recover unmediated forms: a meal with one person, unplugged time, local community participation. This isn't rejecting all technology but recognizing what's been lost. Some loneliness persists precisely because platforms have carved away the friction, inconvenience, and commitment that once forged real belonging. Recovering the uncarved block means reclaiming spaces and practices that social media cannot optimize.
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