Humans have always wanted immortality. Kings performed rituals, emperors searched for elixirs, sages retreated into forests—anything to stretch time just a little longer.
Today, this obsession has only taken a different form—anti-aging routines, biohacking, longevity supplements, cosmetic procedures—anything to stay young and live longer.
But what makes it an obsession instead of self-preservation? What makes it greed instead of a need?
The shift happens when the goal moves from living well to cheating death. A bid to live forever—an endless life spent in epicurean pursuits. But when longevity is sought in service of a life well lived—of learning, depth, and self-understanding—it stops being an obsession and becomes a necessity.
There were arrogant kings who wanted immortality so that they could rule the world forever. Then there were sages who lived lives of austerity and self-discipline and devoted themselves to deep thinking and learning. They were all chasing immortality, but the kings sought an endless life of comfort and pleasure, while the sages wanted it for the pursuit of knowledge.
The kings are dead, their kingdoms buried under the earth—forgotten. The sages live on through their teachings and philosophies.
Mudit
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