Laozi's paradoxical wisdom shows that true preparedness for death comes through releasing attachment to outcomes, not through obsessive planning.
Taoist paradox teaches that by embracing emptiness and non-grasping, we become most resilient when life shifts. Memento mori instructs us to contemplate death, yet this contemplation should not fuel frantic bucket-list completion or desperate legacy-building. Instead, Laozi invites a deeper paradox: prepare by not preparing in the conventional sense. Release the illusion that accumulation—wealth, achievements, relationships contingent on immortality—creates security. True preparation means cultivating inner flexibility, clarity about what truly matters, and freedom from the exhausting performance of permanence. This paradox dissolves the anxiety-driven duality of preparation versus resignation. We become genuinely ready not by grasping harder, but by releasing the false promise that any preparation can defeat impermanence itself.
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