The Taoist concept of pu (uncarved block) applied to mortality—stripped of pretense by confronting death, you recover original simplicity.
Laozi uses the metaphor of pu, the uncarved block, to represent natural, unconditioned existence before society carves away our authenticity. Memento mori serves this same function: it strips away false concerns. When you vividly remember that you will die, your life gets uncarved. The trivial anxieties about status, appearance, and comparison lose their grip. You realize you were always this simple, original self underneath the accumulated layers of social performance. The practice of mortality-awareness is like erosion—it removes what is not essential. This is not nihilism but liberation. By accepting death, you release the desperate clinging to an artificial self-image that death will annihilate anyway. You return to the uncarved block: your genuine character, undefended and unpretentious. The paradox is that this simplicity, gained through facing finitude, is richer than all the defenses we build in denial. You become more alive by accepting death.
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