The Taoist paradox that true fullness emerges from emptiness, teaching that accepting mortality creates space for authentic presence and meaning.
Taoism celebrates emptiness—the cup that is useful because it is hollow, the room that serves because it contains space. When you deeply accept mortality, you empty yourself of the illusion of permanence, creating psychological and spiritual capacity. This emptiness is not void but fertile potential. Laozi teaches that by releasing resistance to ending, you paradoxically become fuller in the present moment. Memento mori practiced this way means clearing away false securities and attachments, leaving room for what truly matters. The awareness that your time is finite creates a clarity that busy, immortality-seeking minds cannot access. This emptiness before fullness is a daily practice: surrendering the need for permanence allows genuine aliveness to emerge.
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