A meditation practice rooted in Taoist observation, directly facing mortality until anxiety transmutes into acceptance.
Laozi valued quiet observation without judgment—sitting with what is rather than forcing change. This contemplative stance becomes a practice for memento mori: regularly sit with the felt reality of your own mortality. Not morbidly dwelling, but directly noticing the truth: this body will fail, this life has an endpoint, everything you love will be lost or you will be lost to it. Most people avoid this moment; Stoics and Taoists deliberately enter it. In the silence, anxiety often rises—then passes. By repeatedly returning to this space without fixing or fleeing, you develop a new relationship to impermanence. The Taoist sage cultivates equanimity through patient observation, much as water wears stone through constant, gentle contact. This practice, done regularly, gradually dissolves the psychological resistance that causes suffering around mortality.
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