Recognizing that fighting against time's passage is futile; instead, aligning your rhythm with time's natural motion.
Time moves without asking permission. Yet humans spend enormous energy resisting: regretting the past, dreading the future, refusing the present moment. Laozi observes that the Tao Te Ching's greatest power flows precisely because it doesn't push—it yields to what is already happening. Temporal wu wei applies this to mortality: you cannot prevent time's passage or death's arrival, so why exhaust yourself resisting? Instead, align with time's rhythm. Mourn the past without paralysis. Prepare for the future without anxiety. Inhabit the present without resentment. This is not complacency but synchronized living. The Stoic memento mori practice gains efficiency through temporal wu wei: you spend less energy fighting the inevitable and more energy acting wisely within it. Your mortality becomes not a burden to bear but a dance you join.
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