Laozi's parable of the gnarled, unproductive tree that survives because it has no commodity value, teaching non-utility as presence.
In Zhuangzi's rendering of Taoist wisdom, the twisted, useless tree survives while straight timber becomes lumber. This parable inverts productivity culture's values to reveal how presence thrives outside market logic. In modern life saturated with optimization and utility-seeking, mindfulness means spending time with no productive outcome: sitting, breathing, simply being aware without converting the experience into achievement. This challenges the ego's demand that even meditation should yield results, improvements, and gains. The useless tree teaches that your value as a person isn't measured by output, efficiency, or accumulated experiences. Being fully here means releasing the constant internal audit—'Is this meditation working? Am I improving?' When you stop demanding that your presence be useful, paradoxically, you become most present. This practice liberates attention from the productivity trance that fragments most people's days. The deepest gift of mindfulness isn't measurable; it's the restored capacity to simply be alive, undefended and unjustified, like an ancient tree standing in the forest for no reason at all.
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.