Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Waterway Path: Flowing Through Resistance

Navigating social pressure by flowing around obstacles rather than confronting them directly.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Water in Taoist thought exemplifies perfect adaptability: it flows around obstacles, follows the lowest path, and ultimately wears away the hardest stone. Social media creates social pressures and FOMO that feel immovable when resisted head-on; the psychological tension increases with direct confrontation. The waterway path suggests flowing around social expectations rather than rigidly rejecting them. This means participating selectively, disengaging without proclamation, and finding natural rhythms of presence that don't require constant resistance. The concept acknowledges that society's pull is real, but force against it creates equal counter-force. Instead, like water, find the path of least resistance that still honors your wellbeing—perhaps engaging with chosen communities while avoiding algorithmic feeds, posting sporadically without explanation, or simply shifting attention gradually toward offline life. This approach reduces the psychological friction and moral exhaustion that comes from seeing yourself in constant battle with platforms and peers.

Helpful guides
Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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