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Concept
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The Ten Thousand Things Returning

Laozi's vision of all forms arising and dissolving teaches that your death is not tragedy but cosmic pattern, returning you to the undifferentiated source.

Laozi
Why It Matters

The Tao Te Ching describes existence as the Ten Thousand Things—infinite manifestations arising from and returning to the nameless source. Each thing has its season of form, then dissolves back into the whole. Your individual existence is one such manifestation: temporarily distinct, inevitably returning. This cosmology reframes memento mori from personal loss into natural rhythm. You are not an exception being erased; you are a pattern completing its arc. Laozi saw this not as depressing but liberating: if you're already part of the eternal cycle, your small self's anxieties lose grip. The Ten Thousand Things perspective dissolves the illusion of separation that makes death seem like interruption. Instead, death appears as homecoming. In this view, remembering you will die means remembering you will return—to dust, energy, the source that birthed you. This Taoist cosmology transforms Stoic memento mori from contemplation of the void into meditation on belonging to something infinite.

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