The yin-yang symbol teaches that technology and non-technology aren't opposites but complementary forces; neither is complete without the other.
The yin-yang embodies interdependence and dynamic balance—each pole contains the seed of the other. Applied to technology and children, this rejects both technophobia and techno-utopianism. Absence of screens without presence of meaningful activity is empty asceticism; technology without screen-free space becomes imbalance. The wisdom is in flow between states. A child needs both: time immersed in digital tools and time in unmediated nature, play, and rest. Neither state is superior; the dance between them creates health. Laozi warns against extremes because they break the natural cycle. Modern parenting often swings wildly—banning screens entirely, then abandoning boundaries—because we've lost the Taoist center. The invitation is gentler: design rhythms where technology and its absence take turns naturally, like day and night. This reframes the debate from "technology: good or bad?" to "how do we create sustainable rhythm?" The balance itself is the teacher.
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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