Using water's constant flow and transformation as a model for accepting life's changes, aging, and inevitable decline.
Water is Laozi's central metaphor: it flows around obstacles, takes the shape of its container, wears down mountains through persistence, and exists in constant transformation. Applying this to mortality, water becomes a teacher of impermanence. Unlike a stone that resists change and cracks under pressure, water demonstrates that yielding to transformation is strength. In memento mori practice, we are the water, and time is the landscape through which we flow. Our bodies change, our minds age, our relationships shift—these aren't failures but natural movements. The Taoist sage observes without resistance, understanding that fighting against the current of time wastes vital energy. Water never protests its evaporation or its role as part of cycles larger than itself. By internalizing this metaphor, practitioners develop fluid acceptance: our finitude is not a tragedy but our nature, as inevitable and beautiful as water's continuous circulation through the world.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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