A meditation framework where you visualize your accumulated possessions, achievements, and relationships returning to the void from which they came.
Laozi taught that all things emerge from the undifferentiated emptiness and return to it—the cycle as natural as breathing. Applied to memento mori, this concept becomes a practice: regularly envision the dissolution of what you've built. Your home will be emptied, your wealth redistributed, your name forgotten. Rather than triggering despair, this Taoist visualization dissolves the neurotic energy spent protecting and expanding possessions. It clarifies what truly nourishes you versus what demands constant maintenance and anxiety. The Stoic examines duty; the Taoist asks: what if I released all of this tomorrow? This question reveals authentic values beneath social conditioning. Practiced regularly, contemplation of return to emptiness creates lightness in daily life. You hold things—relationships, roles, objects—more lightly, handle them with greater care precisely because you're no longer strangled by the fantasy of permanence. This makes death less fearful and presence more vivid, since you've already rehearsed the release.
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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