A Taoist paradox where contemplating mortality deeply shifts you from seeking permanence to fully inhabiting impermanence.
Most people avoid memento mori because they fear it will depress them—that focusing on death will diminish life's enjoyment. Laozi reveals the paradox: actually, denying death diminishes life. When you truly accept mortality, you stop deferring joy to an imagined 'someday' and start living now. The person who fully accepts they will die becomes the person most alive: more present, more appreciative, less defensive. This is not morbid obsession but clarifying wisdom. The Stoic memento mori practice, when done through Taoist understanding, reverses ordinary logic: by contemplating death, you learn to live. Each meditation on mortality should leave you lighter, not heavier—more willing to try, fail, forgive, love, create. The acceptance of life's finiteness is what makes life precious. When you stop fleeing mortality, you stop fleeing living. The practice becomes not a grim duty but a gateway: daily contemplation of death as daily resurrection into authentic life.
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