Taoist cyclical time-view replacing linear progress with eternal return, freeing you from pressure to achieve before death.
Western memento mori often assumes linear time: a finite countdown creating urgency and anxiety. Taoism views time cyclically—seasons repeat, patterns echo, nothing is truly lost but transforms. This reframes mortality radically. Your individual death matters less when viewed against eternal recurrence. Laozi taught that the Tao moves in cycles: creation and destruction, rise and fall, presence and absence. Your life is one wave in an infinite ocean. Memento mori combined with cyclic vision removes the frantic pressure to accomplish everything before death. You need not rush. Instead, you align with natural rhythms: times to act, times to rest, times to create, times to dissolve. This is not escapism but deep acceptance. The pressure to leave monuments or legacies dissolves when you recognize that you are part of something larger and eternal. Your unique expression matters—yet so does your willingness to fade. This cyclic view transforms memento mori from ticking-clock anxiety into peaceful rhythm.
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