Wu wei (non-action, effortless action) applies to mortality itself: the wisdom of accepting death's inevitability rather than struggling against it.
Wu wei—action that flows with reality rather than forcing against it—is Laozi's answer to mortality anxiety. Most people struggle against death through denial, distraction, or desperate control. Wu wei suggests a different path: align with the grain of existence itself, which includes ending. This isn't resignation but radical realism. The sage who remembers death doesn't thrash against time's current; they learn its rhythm and move with it. In practical terms, wu wei applied to memento mori means: stop pretending you're permanent, stop investing solely in outcomes you can't guarantee, stop resisting the shape of a finite life. Instead, act with full presence precisely because time is limited. Like water finding its path downhill without consultation, dying well means releasing the tension between who you think you should be and who you actually are. This Taoist non-action is the deepest Stoic acceptance.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.