Pu, or the uncarved block, represents raw potential in empty moments before they're shaped by distraction or forced purpose.
Pu, the uncarved block, symbolizes original wholeness before modification. Empty time mirrors this state—it hasn't yet been carved into productivity, entertainment, or achievement. Laozi valued Pu because it held infinite possibility without the rigidity of predetermined form. Boredom signals that your time hasn't yet found its natural shape. Rather than hastily imposing structure, Taoist wisdom invites you to dwell in this formlessness temporarily, noticing what emerges organically. This isn't laziness; it's receptivity. When you treat empty time as Pu—unfinished, unmarked potential—you shift from anxiety about wasting it to curiosity about what it wants to become. This reframes boredom as an invitation to authentic self-direction rather than a problem requiring immediate solution.
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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