Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Knowing When to Stop: The Ethics of Sufficiency

Zhī zhǐ—knowing when to stop—as the practice of recognizing enough, redirecting death-driven ambition into contentment.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Laozi taught zhī zhǐ: knowing when to stop. This is radical in cultures that celebrate endless striving. Most death-anxiety fuels compulsive achievement—the fantasy that if we accumulate enough, accomplish enough, we'll somehow outrun mortality. This exhausts life before death claims it. By practicing zhī zhǐ, you consciously recognize sufficiency. Enough money. Enough status. Enough possessions. This doesn't mean abandonment of responsibility but rather clarity about what genuinely serves flourishing versus what serves fear-based accumulation. Memento mori becomes practical ethics: if you're dying anyway, why waste the remaining years pursuing excess? This practice frees tremendous energy. You can invest in depth rather than breadth, relationships rather than conquest, presence rather than perpetual grasping. Laozi recognized that knowing when to stop is knowing yourself. It's admitting finite capacity and finite time, then choosing consciously where to direct that finite resource. This transforms mortality awareness from paralyzing anxiety into liberating prioritization.

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Technology & Attention
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