The art of choosing AI tools through effortless action rather than forcing unnecessary complexity into your workflow.
Wu wei, or non-action, teaches that the most effective tool is often the simplest one already available. Laozi's principle suggests that overcomplicating your AI stack creates resistance rather than flow. When selecting tools, ask not what's newest or most powerful, but what requires the least friction to integrate into your natural work rhythm. This means testing whether a basic spreadsheet formula serves better than a specialized AI platform, or whether your existing software's built-in automation already solves your problem. True technological mastery emerges when you stop fighting against limitations and instead work with what naturally aligns with your process. The Taoist approach rejects the modern obsession with optimization theater—the appearance of improvement through constant tool-switching. By practicing wu wei in technology adoption, you conserve mental energy, reduce context-switching costs, and paradoxically achieve more by doing less.
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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