Understanding that emptiness—death, loss, blank space—is not absence but the source from which all renewal emerges.
Western anxiety about death focuses on ending, loss, negation. But Taoist thought perceives emptiness as fertile: the void contains all potential. A room's usefulness comes from empty space, not walls. A cup's value lies in what it holds—the emptiness within. Death empties you, yet this emptiness is not mere subtraction. Recognizing mortality teaches you that every ending creates space for renewal—your death creates space for others' lives, your releasing of ambitions creates psychological space for peace. Memento mori through Taoist eyes becomes contemplation of fertile void: what would become possible if I released this burden? What blooms in the empty space after I stop grasping? The Stoic discipline gains resonance: prepare yourself not for obliteration but for transformation. Your death nourishes what comes next, just as fallen leaves nourish soil.
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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