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  • Wrapping your mind around your life is pretty hard because you're up to your neck in it.

  • It's like trying to understand the ocean while learning how to swim.

  • On most days, you're busy just keeping your head above water.

  • So it's not easy to figure out what to do with your life and how to spend your time.

  • There are a million distractions.

  • Your family, friends and romantic partners, boring work and exciting projects.

  • Video games to play and books to read.

  • And then there's your couch that somebody needs to lie on.

  • It's easy to get lost.

  • So let's take a step back and look at your life from the outside.

  • The average Kurzgesagt viewer is around 25 years old, which is a pretty good time in the life of most people.

  • The insecurities of the teenage years have begun to recede.

  • Maybe you find yourself in a job or a long-term relationship.

  • Maybe you've started a family or are working on an advanced degree.

  • Maybe you're not doing any of that and still want to enjoy life, whatever that means to you.

  • Or maybe you feel stuck and don't know where to go yet.

  • About 1 in 20 people watching this video will get to live to 100.

  • Let's assume you are one of the lucky ones, which means you had a total of 5,200 weeks of life at your disposal when you were born.

  • You spent the first 600 weeks of your life being a kid and 400 being a teenager.

  • During this time, you were pretty useless for society and also not very free to make your own decisions.

  • As a payoff, you were somewhat spared from the consequences and responsibilities of adulthood.

  • Mostly because well-meaning adults protected you by cleaning up your mess and giving you time to find yourself.

  • This time is necessary to make you, at least in theory, a functioning human.

  • Although most people probably don't feel like that after puberty.

  • In any case, by the time you're 20, over 1,000 of your 5,200 weeks have passed.

  • Depending on what you aspire to, at this point you're either working already or have entered further education.

  • The amount of fun you can have in this phase of your life varies a lot.

  • If you pick up a trade or need to work to support yourself or others, the serious side of life begins earlier.

  • If you go to university, you get to push back work life a bit longer.

  • In any case, most people start working for real in their 20s at the latest, which begins the productive or potentially grindy or soul-crushing period of your life.

  • People tend to work until the age of 65, which means that you'll spend at least 2,000 weeks of your life with serious adult work.

  • Hopefully in a job that makes you feel good and appreciated or that makes the world better.

  • This is such an important thing that we'll look at work and how you can try to find a satisfying career in another video.

  • This is the main block of life for most people.

  • The time when you might have kids and travel a bit and climb the career ladder and build a house may get divorced and fall in love again.

  • In this phase, you transition from being young to middle-aged to old.

  • Not old old, but the young old of your 60s.

  • At 65, you've used up 3,400 of your 5,200 weeks.

  • The last phase of your life begins.

  • If you've managed to acquire enough wealth to retire, in theory, you're now free to do whatever you like for up to 1,800 weeks.

  • But of course, this is not how it works for the majority of you watching this video. 19 out of 20 people will not live to 100.

  • The average lifespan in the US is 79.

  • In Germany, it's 81.

  • In Japan, 84.

  • In Brazil, it's 75.

  • If you die at age 80, which is still not bad, you only have 780 weeks of freedom after you retire.

  • That's roughly as many weeks of freedom as an old person as you spent as a child.

  • Unfortunately, disease and the tiredness of age trip you up here, because with old age, the human body begins to decline sharply.

  • For example, the vast majority of cancer-related deaths occur in people over 70.

  • If you bet all your fun cards on being free and happy in your retirement, you might be bitterly disappointed.

  • And all of this is still assuming things work out and you even get to grow old.

  • You can drown in a pool at age 7, get cancer at age 32, die in a car crash at age 48.

  • You can fall from a ladder at age 60.

  • Every day, the universe rolls a bunch of dice for every human.

  • And every day, someone somewhere on this planet rolls a critical failure, and their life ends that day.

  • The older you get, the more dice are rolled for you.

  • Usually, when you swim through the ocean that is your life, you don't think about all of this too much, and that's fine.

  • Life is engaging enough by itself, and the future is this undefined weird thing.

  • But thinking about it from time to time is helpful in refocusing on what you want to do and to minimize regrets you will have when you look back.

  • And to remind you that if you don't use your time today, you might not get a chance to use it tomorrow.

  • Life is complicated, and it's hard to make decisions between all the things and people that are important to you.

  • This has become painfully obvious to billions of people during the coronavirus pandemic.

  • If you respected social distancing, so many things that we took for granted were not available anymore.

  • Traveling and public places and eating out and seeing friends and meeting new people.

  • Spending time together became limited and precious.

  • But actually, the time you have with the people you love is already precious.

  • Think of your parents.

  • As a child, you spend basically every day with them.

  • Your time spent together begins to decline as you transition and become a teenager and fight to develop your own identity.

  • But as teenagers, you probably still see them regularly, which changes as you enter your 20s, but most people move out.

  • For university, for work, or just to be on their own.

  • If you're making an effort to be with your parents for two full weeks each year for the rest of their lives, which covers the main holidays, birthdays, and a bit extra, you still have already spent more than 90% of the time you will ever spend with them, even if they grow pretty old.

  • If they die earlier, or if you see them only a few days each year, this number shrinks even more.

  • So, in all likelihood, the vast majority of time you will ever spend with your parents has passed.

  • The same holds true for your siblings or old friends that moved to the other side of the country.

  • You're at the tail end of the time with some of the most important people in your life.

  • One day, you will see them for the last time.

  • And it's actually the same with everything else.

  • The concept of doing something for the last time feels eerie, like something that you should only experience when you're on death row, or extremely old, or something like that.

  • But it happens all the time.

  • Is there a hobby you've been lazy about for a long time?

  • Maybe you still have those Warhammer minis that you wanted to paint.

  • Did you always want to revisit that place where you had an amazing time a decade ago?

  • Is there someone you wanted to reach out to for a long time, but haven't yet?

  • Or pick up that sport again to meet new friends?

  • Maybe you will never do any of these things again, because life gets in the way, and at some point, it's too late.

  • As the global pandemic begins to wind down, we will all soon be able to be with each other again and do fun things together.

  • It's never a bad time to reach out to a friend or a potential friend and let them know that you're looking forward to hanging out.

  • But no matter when you're watching this, our life is an incredible gift, and there are so many fun, engaging, and fulfilling things to do.

  • And you get to decide what and who matters to you.

  • But what matters the most is that you actually make decisions from time to time.

  • This video was based on and inspired by an article by our friend Tim Urban of WaitButWhy, the best blog on the internet.

  • Be sure to check it out to get more new perspectives on things.

  • Also, if you want a reminder about the things we still want to do in life, with Tim's permission, we created a Kurzgesagt version of the calendar of your life that lets you track how many weeks of your life you've spent already and how many you have left.

  • You can also color in the weeks to keep track of exactly how you're spending them.

  • If you're just looking for a visual reminder to put things in perspective, we've made a timeline of your life.

  • It's printed in vibrant neon colors on high-quality paper and will look great as an art piece on your wall.

  • Like all of our products, these posters were designed with love and produced with care by us here at Kurzgesagt.

  • Getting something from our shop is the best way to support our channel while getting something beautiful in return.

  • Because of you, we can keep making elaborate videos like the one you just watched and release them for free for everyone.

  • Thank you so much for your support.

Wrapping your mind around your life is pretty hard because you're up to your neck in it.

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