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Scientists are hard at work finding ways to prolong human life, or even eliminate mortality in general. Most of this work can’t protect humans against things like being hit by a bus or slayed by a psychopath (Happy Halloween, all!), but they could stop cell decay and aging as we know it. That being said…do you want to live forever? So much of how we build our lives, pace our activities, create goals for ourselves, and interpret information is based on the knowledge that we will someday die. Imagine if that just…went away. It’s almost impossible to comprehend all the parts of your life that would touch. And it may not be as pretty as you think. Here are reasons you actually don’t want to live forever.

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Younger people get more and more annoying

If you’re a generation X individual, then you already know how obnoxious millennials can seem. If you’re a millennial, then generation Z folks probably drive you a little nuts. Now just imagine being alive for countless generations that come after you. You’ll never understand anything they’re talking about and you won’t relate to any of their views.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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You’d watch people abuse your legacy

You will likely have a legacy. Maybe you’ll invent something that becomes valuable for generations to come, or create artwork that people admire for centuries. But eventually, your invention will become irrelevant and your art won’t speak to the people.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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You’d have to parent your kids forever

If you live forever, and your kids live forever, then your job as a parent will never be done. Think about that for a second. You’ll never be out of the woods when it comes to lending your child money or having to take her in after a divorce or breakup.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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You would get sick of your family

Let’s just come out in the open about this: all of us get a little relief from the idea that we will get to enjoy some years on this planet without our family drama. There is calmness in the thought that these persistent family fights won’t live forever. Not so if we all live forever.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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You’d need to keep making money

You’ll need to have a consistent stream of income. For now, you may have some investment that could yield returns for your entire life. But that stock could shut down. And you’ll need to find new streams of revenue every few decades. Funding eternity won’t be free.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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This place is getting too crowded

We are facing a pretty big overpopulation problem. The planet is already sustaining several more lives than it can, and we just keep creating more people. If you keep living, there will come a point when you’ll just have to live in a teeny, tiny room—that you share with another person—because nobody will die off.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Reaching goals won’t feel as gratifying

Many people have a goal they’d like to reach in a lifetime. Once they reach it, they feel like they can relax—it’s a motivation for retirement. But if you live forever, you won’t feel like you get to just chill after accomplishing something—you’ll just have to keep going.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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You can’t look gorgeous forever

Eternal life isn’t the same as eternal youth. Would you really want to stop aging at, say, 70, and then just keep living? With the wrinkles and the posture and all? Admit it: you’d only want to live forever if you could look good while you were at it.