Laozi's principle of spontaneous naturalness applied to mortality: dying not as struggle but as return to the source, aligning death with the Tao's effortless flow.
Ziran (自然) means spontaneity and naturalness—the Taoist ideal of acting without force or artifice. For memento mori, Laozi reframes death not as an enemy to resist but as the natural completion of the Dao's cycle. Rather than Stoic defiance, this offers wu wei applied to mortality: stop struggling against the inevitable return. When you accept death as ziran—as natural as water flowing downhill—anxiety dissolves. The Taoist sage recognizes that fighting mortality wastes the life you have left. Death becomes not a memento mori warning but an invitation to live with spontaneous authenticity, free from the ego's desperate grasping. This transforms Stoic remembrance into peaceful alignment.
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