If we were guaranteed a 1,000 years

fullsizerender-35

I read an article a while back that claimed that the first person who will live to be age 1,000 has already been born.

If we were guaranteed a 1,000-year life, what would we do differently?

Would we plan stages to do different things and take in different experiences? Would we have several trial runs at things and until we got it right? Would we try to fit in as much as possible and use every single day as it if was our last? Would we do nothing for 990 years, then with just 10 left suddenly think shit I better get on with it now? Would we hate the certainty and hate the fact that there was no risk and so much time that there was no urgency?

Our lives are not guaranteed, much as we have this notion of teenage years, our twenties, thirties etc for each decade until our retirement of this expected life. We all sit and say ‘in my fifties I plan to do this’ or ‘in my retirement, I’m going to do…’.

I must have missed seeing my guarantee.

We do not have a certainty of anything.

Certainty is in our imagination, put there by a system that wants compliance and dependency on them to provide us ‘safety’ in return for that compliance.

It is not about how long we have got, it is about what we choose to do with it and how much we are prepared to exchange their imaginary safety for risk and the potential reward of something meaningful.

Why have a 1,000-year life if all you do is the same as now?

Stop protecting yourself

img_8877

Take off the shield.

We are all going to die one day.

But we won’t die from posting that blog, launching that new service, asking someone on a date, moving house, changing jobs, asking for a salary increase, telling someone you love them or removing something or someone from your life that is not serving you well.

Whatever it is, life is about experiencing things, learning and making it better.

It is not about protecting ourselves.