Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Presence Through Purposeful Play

The cultivation of full presence and attention through engaging in activities valued for their own sake, not for future benefits.

Nas
Why It Matters

Modern meditation and mindfulness practices attempt to cultivate presence through discipline and effort. Yet presence emerges more naturally through genuine play—when we're absorbed in an activity we value intrinsically, attention becomes effortless rather than forced. The Hodja's stories frequently depict full embodied presence: walking, observing, responding. Adults have largely abandoned this spontaneous presence-cultivation in favor of rushed productivity or numbing distraction. We've forgotten that presence isn't a special achievement but the natural result of authentic engagement. When an adult plays cards with friends, builds something with their hands, or explores a place with curiosity, presence arises without requiring willpower. The decline of adult play correlates directly with increasing reports of distraction, anxiety, and dissociation. We're attempting to think our way back to presence when we should simply be doing what genuinely engages us. Play offers a more direct path: it's how humans naturally concentrate, how attention becomes pleasurable rather than forced. Reclaiming adult play means recognizing that the presence we're struggling to achieve through discipline often comes freely when we engage with activities we find genuinely compelling and intrinsically worthwhile.

Helpful guides
Nas
Play & Joy
Peri
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