Viewing lifespan as natural seasons (spring, summer, autumn, winter) to embrace each phase and accept aging rather than resist it.
Taoism is rooted in natural cycles. Spring brings growth, summer abundance, autumn harvest, winter rest. Rather than fighting aging and decline, the Taoist sage recognizes that human life follows the same rhythm. Memento mori becomes not a fixation on death but a celebration of appropriate seasons. At twenty, you are spring: energy for exploration. At forty, summer: peak productivity and power. At sixty, autumn: harvest and wisdom. At eighty, winter: rest and reflection. Each season has beauty and purpose; trying to stay perpetually spring causes suffering. This framework liberates you from the Western denial of aging. You are supposed to change, slow, and eventually stop. By remembering that you will die, you paradoxically honor each season fully. An eighty-year-old practicing wu wei doesn't chase a twenty-year-old's pleasures; she savors the slower, deeper joys available to her phase. This is memento mori as ecological wisdom: you accept your mortality because it mirrors natural law. Your death is not failure; it is completion.
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