Embrace the Taoist truth that emptiness contains infinite potential; mortality's void isn't loss but the ground of all meaning.
Laozi teaches that usefulness comes from emptiness: a cup's value is its hollow center, a room's use is its empty space. Mortality anxiety treats death as absolute emptiness—total loss. The Taoist paradox inverts this: emptiness is fullness. Your limited lifespan, precisely because finite, creates urgency and value. Were you immortal, each moment would be infinitely postponable, infinitely worthless. Death's void generates the positive space within which meaning becomes possible. Memento mori typically induces melancholy; Taoism reveals it as liberation. The approaching emptiness doesn't negate life but concentrates it. Every choice gains weight because unchosen alternatives genuinely fall away. This paradox dissolves the fear that death makes life pointless; rather, death makes life pointed. Meditate: observe how constraints (time, resources, mortality) create the very possibility of value and choice.
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