Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Memento Mori as Mirror Practice

Using the awareness of death as a reflective surface to reveal what truly matters, what is illusion, and where your qi is being wasted.

Laozi
Why It Matters

In Taoist meditation, mirrors symbolize clarity and reflection—showing reality without distortion. Memento mori becomes a mirror practice: holding the fact of your death clearly and watching how your actions, desires, and worries appear in its light. Many concerns that dominate daily life—status competitions, material accumulation, trivial offenses—lose weight when mirrored against mortality. Conversely, genuine connections, creative expression, and moments of presence grow more vivid. This practice differs from Stoic dichotomy of control by offering perception rather than judgment. You don't decide what 'should' matter; you simply observe what the mirror reveals. This creates natural alignment with what Taoists call authentic desire—the wants that flow from your true nature rather than conditioning. By regularly reflecting your life against the mirror of death, you align behavior with reality, reducing the internal friction caused by pursuing false goals. Over time, this cultivates a life of natural coherence where your actions increasingly express your genuine nature rather than borrowed urgencies.

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