Inverting modern denial: instead of living as if you will never die, structure your life as intentional preparation for your ending.
Taoist wisdom inverts the contemporary narrative. Rather than suppressing memento mori, the sage foregrounds it: how should I live knowing I will die? This is not morbid but clarifying. Laozi teaches that understanding the end illuminates the beginning. When you plan your life with your death as the reference point, false priorities fall away. You ask: what relationships deserve my time? What work brings meaning? What legacy do I wish to leave? What fears dissolve when I accept the boundary? This is wu wei applied to life planning: align your actions with reality, not against it. In Taoist practice, you might spend an hour each month imagining your deathbed, asking what you would regret not having done or been. This becomes a compass. Over time, living in awareness of your ending is not depressing; it is profoundly motivating and focused. Your life becomes preparation not in the sense of denial, but in the sense of intentional completion.
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