The practice of following genuine interest and curiosity as the guide for attention allocation, rather than external shoulds.
Taoism teaches following the natural unfolding of the Way rather than imposing predetermined plans. Applied to attention, this means cultivating profound listening to your authentic interests. What genuinely fascinates you? What work creates flow rather than friction? The path of least resistance isn't laziness—it's alignment. When attention follows genuine interest, focus becomes effortless. Laozi would recognize that the watercourse doesn't resist flowing downhill; similarly, your attention doesn't resist flowing toward authentic curiosity. The problem emerges when external shoulds override genuine interest: you 'should' attend to tasks, topics, or relationships that don't resonate. This creates constant friction, depleting attention rapidly. The unfolding practice means regularly checking: Is this attention allocation aligned with my genuine interest? Am I swimming upstream against my nature? By consciously returning attention to what naturally engages you, you restore sustainable focus. This isn't indulgence but recognition that attention freely given flows infinitely, while attention forced dries up.
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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