The concept of pu (uncarved block) suggests that wholeness exists before life fragments you into roles—and death reunites you with that simplicity.
In Taoism, pu represents the unfinished wood, the original simplicity before society carves you into shape. Life fragments us into countless roles: parent, professional, lover, rival. We pour energy into maintaining these carved identities. Memento mori asks: when death comes, which version of you persists? Laozi's answer: none—you return to the root, the uncarved state. This realization liberates you during life: you can relax your death grip on fragmented identity. You can be less defensive about your roles, less invested in others' judgments, more present. Death reveals that all carved identities were temporary costumes. By recognizing this before death forces it, you live with less friction. You become less brittle, more resilient. The Stoic memento mori gains depth when viewed through pu: practice now the simplicity you'll surrender at the end.
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