344. passing moments
Life is a series of fleeting moments, each destined to be experienced for the "last time." The last visit to your childhood home. The last swim in the ocean. The last time you see your parents. Most of the time, we don’t realize these moments are "lasts" until they’re gone forever, leaving us with the bittersweet truth that we can never get them back.
This inevitability — that every moment will pass — ought to make each one precious. Yet we treat the present as nothing more than a stepping stone to an imagined future. We’re consumed by what’s next, blind to the irreplaceable value of now. As each moment slips away, our finite supply grows smaller, and still, we willingly trade them for the pursuit of distant, uncertain goals.
Our culture glorifies chasing the future — achieving goals, hitting milestones, or finding happiness "someday." But this fixation blinds us to the richness of the present, to the beauty of simply existing instead of endlessly striving toward a future that may never arrive.
It’s not entirely our fault. We live in a system that reduces everything — our time, our energy, our lives — to tools for tomorrow. The present is stripped of meaning, valued only for what it might produce. And the irony? Those who’ve “succeeded” most in this system often find themselves empty. They’ve mastered turning time into profit, but they’ve spent their lives treating the present as a means to an end. Happiness, forever over the next horizon, remains just out of reach.
What if we chose a different path? What if, instead of obsessing over what’s next, we embraced the here and now? What if we savored each hug, each laugh, each sunrise as if it were the last? The moments we dismiss as ordinary are, in truth, the essence of life itself.
As the Russian philosopher Alexander Herzen once said: "Because children grow up, we think a child’s purpose is to grow up, but a child’s purpose is to be a child. Nature doesn’t disdain what only lives for a day. It pours the whole of itself into each moment. Life’s bounty is in its flow. Later is too late.”
Much like that child, our purpose isn’t to achieve this or that in some uncertain future — it’s to embrace life as it unfolds in front of us.
Life is short, and the future is never guaranteed. The only certainty you have is the moment you’re in right now. To treat every moment with the reverence it deserves — not as a stepping stone, but as life itself — is to truly live. Every moment is irreplaceable.