Laozi's vision of existence as the Tao manifesting in ten thousand forms: your death is one wave returning to the ocean, a humbling perspective on individual significance.
The Daodejing repeatedly references the "ten thousand things" (萬物)—all manifestations of the Tao. Laozi sees the universe as the Tao endlessly expressing itself through temporary forms. You are one such form: the Tao aware of itself through your particular consciousness. When you die, the Tao continues, expressing itself through other forms. This perspective is simultaneously humbling and comforting. Memento mori becomes: "You are not the center; you are one expression among infinite expressions." This dissolves ego-driven anxiety. Your individual importance shrinks—but paradoxically, this is liberating. You're part of something vastly larger and more enduring. Your death is not tragic interruption but natural cycling. This Taoist cosmology offers memento mori a mythic frame: you're not a separate consciousness facing annihilation but a temporary crystallization of the eternal process returning to its source.
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