Laozi's pu (uncarved block) teaches that accepting your original nature includes accepting death as natural, releasing resistance to impermanence.
In Taoist philosophy, the uncarved block (pu) represents our original, undifferentiated nature before conditioning obscures it. Laozi teaches that we suffer not from mortality itself, but from our desperate carving—our attempts to perfect, preserve, and control what is inherently temporary. Memento mori, the Stoic practice of remembering death, aligns perfectly with this insight: both traditions ask us to stop resisting the grain of existence. When you recall that you will die, you return to the uncarved block. The desperate striving ceases. Your original nature—simple, present, finite—emerges naturally. This is not pessimism but liberation: accepting mortality allows you to release the exhausting project of becoming immortal through achievement or legacy, and instead live with the ease of water flowing downhill.
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