It was my birthday last week, so naturally Iโve been thinking about death.
Itโs probably a function of my age (45), which puts me pretty solidly at midlife (if Iโm lucky), but then also justโฆtime. The passing of time, which has felt so intensely strange these past two years.
I gave a talk recently at Angel City Zen Center about how I kinda feel like I died a few years ago. Iโd hit my early forties without reaching a single cultural milestone that youโre supposed to hit by that age. No husband. No kids. No house. No Dream Job or fat bank account or whatever. I hadnโt (still havenโt!) even published a goddamn book, which has always been my biggest dream.
At the time I felt like one of the worldโs great failures. Just a great big nothing. To say this was humbling is an understatement. Like I said, I died in a way. The timing was directly connected with my biological clock, so if weโre talking about the death of my ability to create life, then I do mean it in a literal sense.
But in another way, thatโs when I was born again. Thatโs when I got free. Iโd tried so hard for so many years on so many levels to get things to go the way I wanted them to, and none of it worked. So really, all I could do was just give up expecting things to go the way I wanted them to go. The only alternative was to give up entirely, and I wasnโt ready to do that.
So here I am, writing to you from the afterlife. For me itโs all bonus time now, a grand experiment I get to embark upon every day. Which is how I wish Iโd approached life all along. Iโd have saved myself a lot of heartache.
A Different Way of Being Hopeless
โItโs been hard to accept that my life didn't go exactly how I thought it should. That is a humbling thing to experience. And to know that your time is finiteโฆ
I still grieve some of the things that I don't have, but I'm way more able to see beyond them as a result of this practice. And I can be grateful for it. And I can see that my weirdo life has value. But I'm not really the judge of that. That's not up to me. That's bigger than me.โ
If dharma talks are your thing, you can listen to the talk I referenced above on the Angel City Zen Center podcast.

โThe human death rate is holding steady at 100%โ
- My dad, every chance he gets. Act accordingly!
Letting Time Use You
โMeaningful productivity often comes not from hurrying things up but from letting them take the time they take, surrendering to what in German has been called Eigenzeit, or the time inherent to a process itself. Perhaps most radically of all, seeing and accepting our limited powers over our time can prompt us to question the very idea that time is something you use in the first place. There is an alternative: the unfashionable but powerful notion of letting time use you, approaching life not as an opportunity to implement your predetermined plans for success but as a matter of responding to the needs of your place and your moment in history.โ
Iโve quoted former Guardian columnist Oliver Burkemanโs work multiple times in this newsletter, and I wholly recommend his new book about embracing your limits, Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals.
Speaking of Doing Things!
A fun story: In the summer of 2020 I started making notes about a podcast I wanted to start. I called it โSara Goes Mental,โ and here's how I described it here last October:
โMental and emotional fitness is every bit as important as physical fitness, but there is nowhere near the amount of information about it as there is for improving your body. And furthermore, thereโs still a major stigma attached to mental health. This podcast will be a series of short interviews with entrepreneurs, freelancers, and creative types who have done serious work on their mental game. Weโll talk about how they got into it, how they know itโs working, and the practices they swear by.โ
A couple of months later, I wrote about how Iโd abandoned all pretenses of starting the podcast. I was excited about it, I teed it all up, but I justโฆdidnโt do it. Hereโs what I said then:
It seems so much clearer to me now that it actually doesnโt matter. It doesnโt make me a better or worse person. It doesnโt mean I wonโt do it at some point in the future. I can imagine all I want that hosting a podcast would have been some kind of ticket to fame and fortune or whatever, but that doesnโt have anything to do with reality. Thatโs just a story. Maybe it would have. Probably it wouldnโt.
Well, I am absolutely thrilled to report that I still have not started the podcast!!!
HOWEVER. I did take that concept on the road, and the smart folks at Every bit. My interview with writer, mother, investor, and all around badass Sari Azout ran last weekend.
Hereโs an excerpt from the conversation:
โAs someone who is very driven and has more ideas than time, I often live inside my head. The reality is it took a near-death health scare to shatter the illusion of security and privilege and remind me not to take the small pleasures for granted.ย
These small beautiful things we experienceโthe hot shower, the home cooked meal, the commute to work while listening to a podcast, the color of the skyโitโs possible not to have them. If you take a moment to imagine not having them, the good fortune of having them is no longer lost on you.โ
Read the interview! And have a look around at Every while youโre at itโtheyโre breathing some much-needed soul into an old (and cold) profession (business journalism).
Sari Azout on Building Emotional Capital
A Tiny Assignment
Fuck bucket lists. Seriously, who needs the pressure? Can you think instead of something you can do now that youโd like to do just for the joy of it? Do it and see what happens.
Thanks, as always, for reading. If you got something out of this, please do share it! That helps me a lot.
๐
Sara
Was a nice surprise seeing SSI represented! Lived there a couple years, lovely place. Need to get back soon.
so good! great reccos