Gui zhen means returning to genuine nature; death strips away pretense, making the question urgent: who are you when all roles fall away?
Gui zhen (歸真) in Taoist philosophy means returning to your original authentic nature—before social conditioning, before acquired persona, before the masks you wear. Memento mori creates urgency around this return because death is the ultimate role-stripper. Laozi begins the Daodejing by noting that those who truly know don't speak; those who speak don't know—suggesting that authentic being precedes constructed knowledge. Most people live defending an identity: professional status, family role, social reputation. This identity-maintenance consumes enormous energy and creates chronic anxiety. Memento mori reveals the futility of this maintenance: death will dismantle it regardless. Gui zhen invites you to begin the return now. Who are you before accomplishment? What remains when status is removed? What natural inclinations have you suppressed for approval? By contemplating death, you give yourself permission to investigate these questions and gradually strip away false self-concepts. This makes your remaining years increasingly authentic, aligned with your true nature rather than borrowed scripts.
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