What if death wasn’t certain?
Friends,
I was driving the other day when a thought hit me.
Death feels unpredictable, doesn’t it? We have no idea when it’ll come.
But it’s also the most predictable thing there is—it’s the only thing we know for sure is coming.
But here’s the thing—it’s not just certain that we’ll die. We even have a rough window for it, right? Most of us can expect to go somewhere between 70 and 100 years old, and almost no one makes it past 110.
But what if that wasn’t the rule anymore?
Imagine this: a new treatment for longevity. You’d have to take it by 25, but here’s the kicker—it only works for half of us, and we can’t even tell who it’s working for.
This kind of life? It would be tough—devastating, even.
I can’t imagine not knowing whether I’d have to live without Robyn for 100 years. Just thinking about it—it’d tear me apart.
And what about my kids? Their kids? Would I end up burying generations of my own family because I lived to 500?
Then there’s friendships. Would they cross generations too? Or would we all start isolating, afraid to get close to people when we had no idea how long they’d be around?
Money—would we work forever? Could we even retire?
And politics? Would having immortals who cared about the extreme long-term make things better? Or would culture fall apart because the thread of shared experience stretched too thin?
I don’t have the answers. This idea—this uncertainty about how long we might live—it’s unsettling in ways I didn’t expect.
But what about you? How does this land for you? What would it mean to live in a world where death was no longer the one certainty we had?
With love from Detroit,
Neil
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