Keeping your mind unattached and receptive by maintaining awareness that your cup will empty, preventing stagnation.
Laozi's image of the empty cup—receptiveness that allows constant renewal—gains urgency through mortality. An ego stuffed with certainty, achievement, and accumulated identity cannot receive new experience; it simply projects old patterns. Death-awareness empties the cup by revealing that all acquired things—status, possessions, beliefs—will be stripped away. This emptiness is not loss but capacity. When you hold your life-experience lightly, knowing it is temporary, you remain available to genuine encounter rather than defending fixed self-image. The cup becomes a container for each moment's fullness precisely because you do not cling to it. This psychological posture prevents the deadening calcification of a life spent protecting what was rather than engaging what is. Memento mori thus becomes a daily practice of emptying: releasing yesterday's achievement, today's slight, tomorrow's plan—not to become passive but to stay alive, responsive, and fully present to what remains.
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