Viewing death not as ending but as transition; Taoist dissolution into the larger pattern rather than annihilation.
Western memento mori can emphasize death as annihilation—consciousness ceases, identity dissolves. The Taoist perspective is subtly different: you dissolve back into the Tao, the undifferentiated whole from which you emerged. Death is a gateway, not a wall. This reframes the fear. You came from the universe and return to it. Your individual form was temporary; the substance underlying it eternal. Laozi taught that the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao—and you, as an individual, are a temporary naming of something eternal and nameless. Contemplating this, memento mori becomes less about panic and more about homecoming. The rigid boundaries of ego, which create so much suffering through grasping and defending, will dissolve. Rather than desperately clinging to individual identity, you can practice letting it go now, moment by moment. This is not morbid but liberating. You practice dying before you die, releasing the illusion of separateness. When actual death comes, it is familiar, a return rather than a catastrophe.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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