Releasing curated personas returns us to our original, unperformed nature—the foundation for real connection.
Laozi's symbol of the uncarved block (pu) represents the original, unconditioned nature before social shaping. Social media operates as a carving tool, constantly shaping identity into marketable form. Each profile edit, each deleted post, each persona-adjustment removes another chip from our authenticity. Loneliness deepens precisely because the uncarved block—our genuine nature—remains hidden beneath layers of curation. The Taoist path involves returning to simplicity, to wholeness before fragmentation. This doesn't mean abandoning self-expression but releasing the frantic need to make it perfect, marketable, or strategically advantageous. The uncarved block is imperfect, inconsistent, sometimes awkward—exactly what humans are. When we present this uncarved authenticity on digital platforms, something shifts: the anxious energy of maintenance dissolves, and we become magnetic precisely through our refusal to perform. Others recognize realness instinctively. Loneliness—which grows from the isolation of false personas—begins healing when we risk showing our uncarved selves. This reversal from performance to presence, from carved to uncarved, rebuilds genuine social capacity.
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