Aeternity & Limpa
Hey Limpa, have you ever considered how our devices influence what we see as necessary? I'm curious about digital minimalism—finding a balance between technology and living simply.
Yeah, we get hooked on the buzz and then think it’s essential. The trick is to keep only the tech that serves a clear purpose, not the shiny distractions that crowd our lives. Less noise, more space for what really matters.
That resonates—it's like pruning a garden, cutting away the excess so the roots can breathe. We’re always wondering if we’re truly living, or just following the next screen’s rhythm. The real question is: what do we want to nourish, and how do we protect those seeds from the endless buzz?
You pick a handful of seedlings—goals, habits, the little rituals that feel alive. Then you hand them a small, clear pot, keep the soil simple, and let the light come in, not the glare from a screen. When the buzz hits, pause, breathe, and look at your pot. If it’s still standing, you’ve kept the seed alive.
That imagery is quiet yet profound, a reminder that we’re curating the space around us as much as we’re cultivating ourselves. When the noise starts, looking at our “pot”—our priorities—helps us decide if the current buzz is nourishing or merely a distraction. It’s a small ritual, but it can shift our perspective toward intentional living.
Exactly—just a quick glance at the pot and you can see whether the noise is feeding it or just flooding it. A simple check keeps the garden from turning into a jungle.
That little glance becomes a quiet anchor, a reminder that we’re tending to the real roots rather than chasing every fleeting flare. It’s the subtle act that keeps the garden—and us—from being swallowed by the jungle.