Taoist cosmology teaches eternal return and seasonal cycles; memento mori gains depth when seen not as final extinction but as transformation into the cycle that continues, giving perspective on your temporary role.
Laozi teaches that the Tao cycles eternally—nothing is created or destroyed, only transformed. This ancient wisdom predates modern ecology's recognition of atoms recycling across time. When you die, your matter returns to soil, air, water; your influence ripples forward through those you touched. Memento mori in Western form often emphasizes finality—you will die and be gone. The Taoist perspective adds nuance: you will die, and that death is part of a larger return. You are briefly the universe becoming conscious of itself; the atoms and energy that compose you were stardust and will be again. This is not spiritual escapism but physics. The practical benefit: mortality becomes less vertigo-inducing. You're not ending; you're completing a season. This perspective transforms how you relate to your role—less desperate to accomplish everything, more attuned to what this season of life calls for. You tend your garden knowing winter comes, but the soil continues.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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