Replace struggle against death with receptive preparation; the final transition requires releasing effort itself.
The Stoic prepares for death through disciplined will—controlling judgment, maintaining virtue despite fear. Taoism suggests a different preparation: learning to receive rather than grasp. All your life you've pushed, accomplished, controlled. Death is the one event where such effort becomes counterproductive. To die well requires reversing this entire muscular orientation toward life. Begin now. Notice where you're pushing unnecessarily—against your body's limits, others' choices, unwanted emotions. Practice gradually releasing the grip. This isn't passivity but the cultivation of receptive strength, like water that yields and eventually wears stone. As death approaches, the capacity to stop pushing and start receiving becomes everything. Those who die struggling—refusing rest, fighting pain, denying reality—suffer more than those who've practiced receptivity. Memento mori becomes not steeling yourself but softening yourself. Build the psychological flexibility now to receive what cannot be refused.
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