Shi (勢) means momentum or propitious timing; memento mori teaches that mortality creates urgency—making now the only moment where action matters.
Shi is a Taoist principle of recognizing and aligning with the hidden momentum of circumstances. A skilled archer doesn't force the arrow; she waits for the right moment—the convergence of wind, target, and readiness. Memento mori amplifies shi: your finite timeline means that no moment repeats; procrastination is literally stealing from your own existence. Laozi teaches that the sage acts decisively at the pivot point, when minimum effort yields maximum result. Death awareness sharpens your perception of these moments. The person who truly remembers they will die stops waiting for perfect conditions and recognizes that now—this breath, this conversation, this choice—is always the propitious moment. Shi transforms memento mori from paralyzing dread into focused clarity. You move through life with enhanced sensitivity to kairos (the right time), distinguishing between urgent distraction and genuine opportunity. This practice makes every action intentional because you know your time is limited and irreplaceable.
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