A daily meditation where you sit in the chair death will eventually claim, observing your life from mortality's perspective without resistance or urgency.
The Empty Chair Practice combines Laozi's wu wei (non-action) with memento mori by creating space for death awareness without forcing confrontation. Rather than anxiously contemplating mortality, you sit quietly in an imagined position of your future absence, observing your current life flow past like water around stone. This Taoist approach avoids the Stoic's deliberate exercise of fear; instead, it lets death's inevitability settle naturally into consciousness through receptive stillness. The practice reveals which attachments dissolve when viewed from beyond the grave, and which activities align with your deepest nature. By regularly occupying this empty space, you train yourself to act from authentic desire rather than driven urgency—the paradox being that accepting death fully liberates present action.
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