Viewing your finite life as an unfinished sculpture whose meaning emerges precisely through its incompleteness and natural ending.
The uncarved block (pu) represents original simplicity and potential before interference. Applied to mortality, your life is an uncarved block that will never be fully 'completed' according to ego's designs—and this incompleteness is its perfection. Laozi suggests that finished things decay; the unfinished remain whole. Your death is not a failure to complete some grand project but the natural boundary that gives your life coherence and shape. A life cut short at fifty, seventy, or ninety-five has its own wholeness if lived with awareness. This reframes the memento mori not as 'you failed to accomplish enough' but as 'your life's natural form is already complete.' The pressure to finish everything dissolves when you accept that death writes the final line. The uncarved block teaches you to stop over-editing existence and trust the simple elegance of a life bounded by time.
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