H
December    21st
WHAT    DO  YOU HAVE    TO  SHOW    FOR YOUR    YEARS?“Many   times   an  old man has no  other   evidence    besides his age to  prove   he  has lived   a   long    time.”
—SENECA,    ON  TRANQUILITY OF  MIND,   3.8bow  long    have    you been    alive?  Take    the years,  multiply    them    by  365,    and then    by  24. How many
hours   have    you lived?  What    do  you have    to  show    for all of  them?
The answer  for many    people  is: not enough. We  had so  many    hours   that    we  took    them    for granted.    All
we  have    to  show    for our time    on  this    planet  are rounds  of  golf,   years   spent   at  the office, time    spent
watching    mediocre    movies, a   stack   of  mindless    books   we  hardly  remember    reading,    and maybe   a   garage
full    of  toys.   We’re   like    the character   in  Raymond Chandler’s  The Long    Goodbye:    “Mostly,    I   just    kill
time,”  he  says,   “and    it  dies    hard.”
One day,    our hours   will    begin   to  run out.    It  would   be  nice    to  be  able    to  say:    “Hey,   I   really  made    the
most    of  it.”    Not in  the form    of  achievements,   not money,  not status—you  know    what    the Stoics  think   of  all
that—but    in  wisdom, insight,    and real    progress    in  the things  that    all humans  struggle    against.
What    if  you could   say that    you really  made    something   of  this    time    that    you had?    What    if  you could
prove   that    you really  did live    [insert number] years?  And not just    lived   them,   but lived   them    fully?