Protected empty time within the examined calendar that remains intentionally unstructured, creating space for emergence and spontaneity.
Laozi's concept of emptiness—the usefulness of the void—directly challenges calendars completely filled with appointments. The Unscheduled Hour is not laziness or procrastination, but deliberate preservation of temporal emptiness where unexpected opportunities, creative insights, and genuine presence become possible. In a culture obsessed with optimization, this practice asks: what becomes possible when we stop scheduling every moment? By maintaining regular pockets of unstructured time, you create the conditions for wu wei—actions that arise naturally rather than from predetermined plans. These hours become experimental space where you notice what actually matters versus what merely feels urgent. The examined calendar distinguishes between time spent and time inhabited. When you protect empty hours, you're not wasting them; you're maintaining the spaciousness that allows authentic response to emerge, just as silence gives meaning to music.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.