Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Seasonal Timing and Mortality Cycles

View your life as a natural season with spring growth, summer vitality, autumn ripening, and winter rest—accepting each phase's necessity and beauty.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Taoism is deeply cyclical: seasons turn, yin becomes yang becomes yin. Laozi teaches alignment with natural rhythms rather than denial of them. Memento mori becomes more bearable when you stop seeing life as one long summer that should never end, and instead recognize the natural seasons of existence. Youth is spring's urgency and growth; middle years are summer's fullest power; age is autumn's harvest and release; death is winter's necessary rest. Each season has its own gifts and constraints. The Taoist sage does not rage against aging because aging is not anomaly—it is the season turning as it must. This framework dissolves much of memento mori's sting: you are not being cheated of permanent youth, you are being offered the full spiral of experience. Accepting your current season means living it well, not wasting it resisting the next.

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Laozi
Technology & Attention
Peri
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