Returning to your sleep's original simplicity, before conditioning and technology carved away your natural capacity to rest.
Laozi uses the image of the uncarved block (pu) to describe the original, uncomplicated nature of being. Before we learned to worry about sleep, before screens disrupted circadian rhythms, before sleep became a measured metric to optimize, we simply slept. Your body still carries this uncarved block—the capacity to rest that needs no instruction manual. Yet layers of conditioning, anxiety, and technological interference have obscured it. This Taoist concept suggests that sleep restoration isn't about acquiring new techniques but removing obstacles to what already works. Like a sculptor revealing the statue within stone, examining your sleep means asking: what was here before the worry? What remains if you stop monitoring? The framework invites gentle deconstruction—eliminating sleep aids, alarms, and midnight phone checks not through willpower but through recognizing they contradict your nature. Returning to the uncarved block means trusting that rest is your default state, and that you can return to it by removing rather than adding.
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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