Creating dynamic balance between sharing and privacy, presence and withdrawal, that honors both connection and solitude.
The yin-yang symbol teaches that wholeness requires balance of opposites—light and dark, activity and rest, giving and receiving. Social media collapses this balance by demanding constant yang (activity, visibility, outward expression). The resulting loneliness emerges from yin deprivation: we're starved of privacy, reflection, and the restoration that comes from withdrawal. Laozi would advocate for conscious yin-yang boundaries: periods of full visibility balanced by protected solitude, public sharing offset by private inner life, active engagement interspersed with deliberate disconnection. This isn't anti-social but life-affirming; it mirrors natural rhythms visible everywhere in nature—day and night, growth and dormancy, expansion and contraction. By protecting your yin—your inner life, your private time, your unshared self—you strengthen both dimensions. You become more genuinely present when online because you're not constantly depleting yourself. You experience less loneliness because you're not abandoning yourself in the pursuit of connection. The balance itself becomes healing.
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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