Death is not life's opposite but its necessary complement; balancing yang (living) with yin (dying) creates wholeness.
The yin-yang symbol shows each force containing the seed of its opposite. Life and death form a unified whole, not a binary struggle. Most people live in yang consciousness—striving, building, expanding—while denying the yin of dissolution and return. Laozi teaches that imbalance breeds suffering; clinging only to life-energy while rejecting death-energy creates existential discord. Memento mori is yin practice: acknowledging diminishment, decay, and finitude. By consciously touching this yin pole regularly, you integrate it rather than repress it. The person who practices awareness of death is not morbid but balanced. They say yes to vitality and yes to mortality, both necessary. This equilibrium produces the centered sage who neither grasps at endless extension nor surrenders prematurely, but flows naturally through both seasons.
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