How Long You Live Isn’t the Most Important Question
We spend a lot of time thinking about how long we’ll live. But what if we’re asking the wrong question?
Homo sapiens is the only species that knows—with certainty—that it will die. Some people spend their lives trying to cheat this truth, chasing longevity or even immortality. But what if fighting death is the wrong goal entirely?
What if the real question isn’t how long we live—but how well?
The Illusion of More Time
Today, the average human lifespan is 73.4 years. In Spain, it’s 81.1. Women typically live about five years longer than men. But how many of those years are actually lived well?
Try this exercise: print a 100-year life calendar. Mark off every week you’ve already lived. What’s left might surprise you.
This isn’t meant to scare you. It’s meant to sharpen your clarity—because time is not the only metric that matters.
Introducing the Concept of
Healthspan
Most people have heard of lifespan. But far fewer know about healthspan—and it’s arguably a much more important concept.
Healthspan refers to the number of years you live in good health—free from chronic disease, mental decline, or significant disability. In short, it’s how long you can truly enjoy your life.
Globally, the gap between lifespan and healthspan averages nearly a decade. That means the last 10 years of many people’s lives are spent not living—but managing illness.
Why We Struggle to Act
We know what we should do—sleep more, move regularly, eat better, manage stress. But most people wait for a wake-up call: a diagnosis, a scare, a burnout. Why?
Because the brain struggles to emotionally connect with our future self. This “future disconnect” makes long-term self-care feel optional—until it’s urgent.
We Were Never Meant to Live This Way
Technology has transformed our environment in just 150 years—but our biology is still wired for survival in the wild.