Uncarved wood symbolizes the mind before conditioning and complexity accumulate, representing the simplicity of pure presence beneath layers of thought.
Laozi uses the metaphor of "uncarved wood" (pu) to describe the original, unconditioned state of consciousness—clear, responsive, and undivided. Like wood before it is carved into objects, the mind in its natural state possesses wholeness and directionless readiness. Modern mindfulness practice often adds complexity: techniques, goals, measurements of progress. Yet Laozi points toward something simpler: recognizing the presence already here beneath all psychological elaboration. Being here isn't about achieving a special state; it's about noticing the simple awareness that witnesses every moment without adding to it. Uncarved wood suggests that your present-moment awareness is already complete—you need not construct or improve it, only notice the unnecessary layers of judgment, planning, and narrative that obscure it. This concept liberates practitioners from the tyranny of self-improvement, revealing that presence is the natural ground of being, perpetually available when you stop carving away at it with conceptual thinking.
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