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Showing posts with the label Wang Bi

You've Read Everything. Why Do You Still Feel Lost?

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9 min read You've consumed hundreds of articles, bookmarked dozens of threads, and saved more productivity tips than you could ever use. And yet, the clarity you were looking for still hasn't arrived. What if the content itself isn't the solution, and might actually be part of the problem? Drawing on Chinese philosopher Wang Bi's forgotten theory of symbols and meaning as well as Stoic philosophy, this post shows you how to cut through digital noise and finally get to the idea underneath all the information. The Trap Hiding Inside Your Browser Tabs You know the feeling. It's 11 p.m., you've got sixteen tabs open, and you're still not sure what to do about the career decision you've been sitting on for three weeks. Every article you read seems to sharpen the question rather than answer it.  That's not bad luck.  That's what happens when you mistake the map for the destination. There's a name for this:  Symbolic Paralysis.  You keep collecting ...

Drowning in the Many: What a Third-Century Chinese Philosopher Can Teach You About Modern Burnout

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  8 min read You've read the productivity books. You track your habits, batch your tasks, and still feel like you're losing. What if the problem isn't your system, but having too many systems? This post draws on the third-century Chinese philosopher Wang Bi to explain why multiplying methods deepens chaos, and offers practical ways to govern your life from a single, quiet centre. The Exhaustion Nobody Talks About There's a particular kind of tired that doesn't come from working too hard. It comes from switching too fast. You're managing a Notion board, a morning routine, a mindfulness streak, a side project, a relationship, and a growing sense that none of it adds up to anything. This is what we might call  Complexity Fatigue . It's not laziness. It's the cost of trying to govern the chaos of modern life by adding more structure to it. The ancient Chinese philosopher Wang Bi (226–249 CE) had a name for what's happening to you. He called it being rule...