Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ziran: The Naturalness of Your Own Dying

Ziran means spontaneous naturalness; your death is as natural and unremarkable as a leaf falling—no struggle required.

Laozi
Why It Matters

Ziran, often translated as spontaneity or self-so-ness, describes the Tao's way: things unfold naturally without interference or resistance. A river doesn't fight its path to the sea; a tree doesn't resist its seasons. Yet humans alone seem to wage war against their own nature—against aging, sickness, and death. Laozi's teaching is radical: your death, like everything else in nature, is ziran. It needs no permission, no bargaining, no special circumstance. It is the most natural thing possible. Stoic memento mori asks you to contemplate your death; Taoist ziran asks you to recognize it as normal as breathing. This recognition defuses the existential drama. You are not being punished or cheated; you are participating in the most ordinary natural process. The practice: observe nature for five minutes daily—growth, decay, transformation. Notice how no creature resists its nature. Contemplate: How much suffering comes from resisting what is already ziran, already unfolding naturally?

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