Cultivating spontaneous, authentic attention aligned with genuine interest rather than obligated, rule-based focus.
Ziran—natural spontaneity, self-so-ness—means your attention flows toward what genuinely calls to it, not what external systems demand. Laozi teaches that the Tao is not forced but naturally arising. When you force attention toward uninteresting tasks, you deplete the resource faster than any other activity. Attention scarcity becomes critical precisely when you ignore what naturally engages you. Conversely, deep work on meaningful problems generates attention rather than consuming it. This suggests radical honesty: instead of fighting against your actual interests through discipline, redesign your commitments to align with what naturally captures your focus. This isn't indulgence; it's thermodynamic truth. A farmer doesn't force crops to grow against their nature but aligns efforts with soil, season, and seed. Similarly, sustainable attention follows genuine interest. By building life around what truly engages you—even if unconventional—you eliminate the massive attention drain of forced compliance.
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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