Periagoge
Concept
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The Gate of All Wonders: Living as Mystery Rather Than Problem

Laozi called mystery 'the gate of all wonders'; mortality ceases to torment when held as mystery rather than solvable problem.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Daodejing opens by teaching that the Tao that can be named is not the eternal Tao; the nameable is only the mother of all things. Laozi taught reverence for mystery and the limits of knowing. Modern consciousness treats death as a problem: How do we defeat it? Extend life? Achieve immortality? This problem-solving approach guarantees suffering because the 'problem' cannot be solved. Stoic memento mori asks you to meditate on death; it doesn't ask you to solve it. Taoist wisdom deepens this: stop trying to solve what is meant to remain mysterious. The moment you release death from the category of 'problem to fix,' it shifts to 'mystery to honor.' This shift is not passivity but liberation. Your death is the gate through which all wonders pass—the very threshold that makes life precious, meaning possible, and time sacred. You need not understand death to live well before it. The practice: when anxious about mortality, pause the mental problem-solving. Instead, sit with the phrase: 'This is mystery, and that is enough.' Notice the relief in surrendering the unsolvable.

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