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December 26th
LIFE IS LONG—IF YOU KNOW HOW TO USE IT
“It’s not at all that we have too short a time to live, but that we squander a great deal of it. Life is
long enough, and it’s given in sufficient measure to do many great things if we spend it well. But
when it’s poured down the drain of luxury and neglect, when it’s employed to no good end,
we’re finally driven to see that it has passed by before we even recognized it passing. And so it
is—we don’t receive a short life, we make it so.”
—SENECA, ON THE BREVITY OF LIFE, 1.3–4a
o one knows how long they have to live, but sadly, we can be sure of one thing: we’ll waste far too
much of life. Waste it sitting around, waste it chasing the wrong things, waste it by refusing to take
the time to ask ourselves what’s actually important to us. Far too often, we’re like the overconfident
academics that Petrarch criticized in his classic essay on ignorance—the types who “fritter away their
powers incessantly in caring for things outside of them and seek themselves there.” Yet they have no idea
this is what they’re doing.
So today, if you find yourself rushed or uttering the words “I just don’t have enough time,” stop and
take a second. Is this actually true? Or have you just committed to a lot of unnecessary things? Are you
actually being efficient, or have you assumed a great deal of waste into your life? The average American
spends something like forty hours a year in traffic. That’s months over the course of a life. And for
“traffic,” you can substitute so many activities—from fighting with others to watching television to
daydreaming.
Your life is plenty long—just use it properly.