A Taoist inversion where you practice wanting death to occur—not in despair, but as ultimate alignment with reality.
The Stoic learns to accept what cannot be refused. But Laozi suggests something more paradoxical: want what you cannot refuse. This is not morbid suicidality but psychological alchemy. Most people split into resistance and resignation: they don't want death but accept it grimly. This creates internal conflict. Instead, practice wanting mortality—not as escape from life's pain, but as the natural completion of living. Wanting what is inevitable neutralizes resentment. This paradox reshapes memento mori from anxious duty into paradoxical desire: 'When my time comes, I will want to go because I will have lived.' This is not passive but powerfully active: you live fully now, knowing the completion it moves toward. The Stoic rehearsal gains emotional depth. You're not grimly accepting mortality; you're practicing gratitude for the finite life that makes it precious.
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