Scarcity of time reveals infinite depth within constraints; limitation becomes the gateway to genuine richness.
Laozi's paradoxes dissolve false oppositions: fullness contains emptiness, weakness reveals strength. Applied to mortality, finite years contain paradoxical abundance. You have limited days, yet each day contains universes of experience. Stoic memento mori typically emphasizes lack—you will lose everything. But the Taoist view reveals the inverse: precisely because time is bounded, each moment gains weight and preciousness. The constraint is not imprisonment but definition. A sculptor carves away marble; mortality carves away the trivial, revealing what was always essential. This paradox transforms grief into gratitude. You cannot have infinite years, but you can recognize that your finite span is not diminished by its limits—it is made luminous by them. Scarcity teaches value in ways abundance cannot.
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