Non-action as the natural response when time dissolves, allowing consciousness to flow rather than resist the near-death experience.
Wu wei—non-forcing action—becomes essential when ordinary time ceases. In near-death experiences, the ego's compulsive need to control and measure time creates suffering; Laozi teaches that releasing this grip allows consciousness to align with the actual flow of the moment. During temporal distortion, the mind that surrenders rather than struggles finds itself moving with reality instead of against it. This isn't passivity but radical responsiveness. The sage recognizes that in the threshold between life and death, trying to maintain linear time is futile; wu wei means acting without the illusion of temporal control, moving with the body's dissolution and consciousness's expansion as naturally as water flows downhill.
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