Laozi warns that naming fixes and kills; you cling to the name 'myself,' which dies—meditation on who remains when that name dissolves.
The Tao Te Ching begins with the paradox that the nameable Tao is not the eternal Tao. Laozi teaches that language and naming are always limitations, always miss the living flow. Applied to mortality: you spend your life building a name, a self-concept, an identity. 'I am successful. I am a good parent. I am skilled.' These names feel like solid truths. But names die. When you contemplate memento mori seriously, you recognize that the name you've built—your social identity, your reputation, your roles—will dissolve. What remains? Laozi suggests that the living awareness itself, unnamed and unnamed-able, continues (or returns to the eternal current). This practice is terrifying and liberating: you practice dying to your names while still alive. Who are you without the identity labels? A Stoic practicing memento mori discovers freedom in this dissolution—the anxiety of protecting your name evaporates when you recognize the name was always temporary anyway. What emerges is simpler: just living, not performing.
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