Wu wei—effortless action—teaches us to stop struggling against death and instead flow with life's impermanence, making memento mori a natural acceptance rather than anxious resistance.
Wu wei, the Taoist principle of non-action or effortless action, reveals that our struggle against mortality creates unnecessary suffering. By remembering we will die, we paradoxically become free to act without the friction of denial. Laozi teaches that the sage does not resist the river's current but moves with it. When you truly accept death's inevitability, you cease expending energy on impossible battles against time. This transforms memento mori from morbid obsession into practical wisdom: you align your actions with reality rather than fantasy. The body ages; the mind resists. Wu wei collapses this gap. Death becomes not an enemy to defeat but a current to navigate with grace, making each action purposeful and each moment vivid.
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