I recently gave a talk at the 2nd Simon Fraser University Workshop on Asian Philosophy, which was held October 25–26, 2025. The theme of this year's workshop was "Death and Immortality." My contribution was a reflection on a striking line in Zhuangzi that claims our death can be considered good on the same grounds that make life good. My explanation of the line is that it reflects two distinctive views prominent in the Zhuangzi: a relational conception of agency and an ecological view of the person. The paper is entitled "How Can Death Be Good? A Zhuangist Outlook."