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July 14, 2026
You could leave life right now. Let that determine what you do and say and think.
Marcus Aurelius wrote these words to himself in Meditations, a private notebook kept during long military campaigns along the Danube frontier. As emperor he lived close to war, plague, and the daily grind of rule, often just a step away from death himself. Here he reminds himself that life could end at any moment, so that fact should shape his actions, words, and thoughts right now. The Stoics never treated mortality as morbid dwelling but as a clarifying discipline that cuts away trivial distractions. Practicing memento mori each morning means letting the shortness of life decide what actually deserves your attention today.
Reflection
This thought can sharpen what I choose to do right now. What is the one thing on my list today that truly matters?
A principle of Stoicism: Memento Mori →
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