By Damilola Omosebi
The Paradox of Living Fully
The idea of living as if today were your last day seems contradictory to living as if you will live forever. One mindset urges urgency, passion, and presence; the other calls for patience, legacy, and long-term growth. Yet, the most fulfilling life embraces both.
This philosophy is echoed by thinkers like Steve Jobs, who said, “Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life.” Meanwhile, visionaries like Warren Buffett invest and build as if they have centuries ahead.
How can we reconcile these two perspectives? How can we seize the day while also planting trees we may never sit under? This article explores how to master this duality—living with both immediacy and eternity in mind.
Part 1: Live as If You Are Dying Today**
- Embrace Radical Presence.
If today were your last, you wouldn’t waste it on distractions. You’d savor every conversation, every meal, every sunset.
- Practice mindfulness —meditation, deep breathing, or simply pausing to observe your surroundings.
- Eliminate trivial distractions —social media scrolling, gossip, and procrastination lose their appeal when time is precious.
Imagine you’re on your deathbed. Would you regret checking emails one last time; or wish you had hugged your loved ones instead?
- Express Love and Gratitude Freely
Many people die with words left unsaid. Don’t wait.
- Tell people you love them; today.
- Write thank-you notes or send voice messages to those who’ve impacted you.
- Forgive quickly; grudges are a waste of precious time.
- Do What Truly Matters Now.
- Postpone nothing important. If you dream of writing a book, start today; even if just a paragraph.
- Quit jobs or relationships that drain your soul. Time is too short for misery.
When Randy Pausch, a computer science professor, was diagnosed with terminal cancer, he delivered “The Last Lecture,” a powerful talk on achieving childhood dreams. He didn’t wait; he acted.
Part 2: Live as If You Will Live Forever.
- Build a Legacy That Outlasts You.
Living forever isn’t about immortality; it’s about creating something that endures.
- Invest in knowledge; read, learn, and teach. Books, podcasts, and mentorships live on.
- Create art, businesses, or movements —Shakespeare, Da Vinci, and Einstein still influence us.
- Nurture relationships —raise great children, mentor others, leave wisdom behind.
An oak tree takes decades to grow but shelters generations. Plant your “oak” today.
- Prioritize Long-Term Health
If you’ll live forever (or at least a long time), your body must sustain you.
- Eat well, exercise, and sleep properly; future you will thank present you.
- Avoid destructive habits: sexual immortality, smoking, excessive drinking, chronic stress.
- Master Delayed Gratification.
Great things take time.
- Warren Buffett didn’t become wealthy overnight—he compounded investments over decades.
- Writers like J.K. Rowling spent years perfecting their craft before success.
Exercise: Start a 10-year project—write a novel, build a business, or master a skill.
Part 3: Merging Both Mindsets—The Balanced Life.
- The “Daily & Eternal” Framework
- Morning: Ask — “If I died tonight, did I live well today?”
- Evening: Ask —”If I live 100 more years, am I building something meaningful?”
- The Rule of “And,” Not “Or”
You don’t have to choose between passion and patience.
- Fall in love today AND commit for a lifetime.
- Take bold risks AND plan for the future. Elon Musk runs SpaceX with a vision for Mars colonization (eternal thinking) while also pushing rapid innovation (urgent thinking).
- Leave No Regrets, Only Foundations
- Live so that if you die tomorrow, you’re at peace.
- Build so that if you live forever, you thrive.
The Art of Timeless Living.
The secret to a life well-lived is balancing urgency with endurance.
- Live today like it’s your last; love deeply, act boldly, savor moments.
- Live forever in your impact; build, learn, and plant seeds for the future.
As the Stoics advised: “Memento Mori” (Remember you will die) and “Amor Fati” (Love your fate). Combine these, and you’ll live; fully, fiercely, and forever.
Now, ask yourself:
- What will you do today that you’d regret leaving undone?
- What will you start now that could outlive you?
The time to live—both urgently and eternally—is now.
















