Pu, the uncarved block, represents wholeness before death divides us; memento mori returns us to original unity and integrity.
In Taoist philosophy, pu (the uncarved block) symbolizes the original, undifferentiated wholeness of existence before fragmentation into individual identities and social roles. As we age and approach death, pu becomes both metaphor and practice: remembering your mortality strips away accumulated identities, returning you toward essential wholeness. Most people spend life carving themselves into smaller and smaller boxes—career, status, image, possessions—until authentic selfhood becomes obscured. Memento mori, viewed through Laozi's lens, is a chisel in reverse: it carves away falsity to reveal original wholeness. By contemplating death, you recognize that all these fragmented roles you've constructed will end, and what remains is simpler, more unified, more true. The uncarved block awaits within: the you before society carved you, the you that will persist in the space between breaths. This Taoist concept reframes mortality as invitation to integration, not disintegration.
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