Taoist acceptance includes what you reject; memento mori's power emerges when you befriend the death-fear you've denied rather than only intellectually acknowledge mortality.
Taoism embraces yin alongside yang, darkness alongside light. In psychological terms, memento mori often confronts your shadow—the death anxiety you've repressed. Laozi teaches that trying to eliminate one pole creates imbalance; you cannot have authentic aliveness without acknowledging death-fear. Many Stoic practitioners intellectualize memento mori, reciting it mentally while their body tenses with unacknowledged dread. Taoist practice invites integration: feel the fear, observe it without judgment, let it inform rather than control you. This is wu wei applied psychologically—not fighting the shadow but moving with it. Befriending your mortality means looking directly at your death-anxiety, understanding its protective function (it kept your ancestors alive), and thanking it while not letting it rule. The Tao includes the uncomfortable. This deeper memento mori, grounded in shadow work, produces genuine equanimity rather than forced stoicism. You remember you will die not as belief but as embodied acceptance. The tension releases. You breathe fuller.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.