Menu

Why Remembering You’re Going to Die Is the Best Motivator

Want more posts like this in your life? Join the Tiny Buddha list for daily or weekly insights.

“Don’t be afraid of death; be afraid of an unlived life. You don’t have to live forever; you just have to live.” ~Natalie Babitt

Once a month, I visit the local cemetery and walk around. I’m not there to visit anyone in particular. I’m there to remind myself of my own mortality.

And it always wakes me up.

I soak in the energy: I read the simple legacies on the tombstones, from young children to those who made it to 100 years old. I’m not morose. I’m not negative. I’ve simply found the greatest motivational tool in the world, and I assure you it’s not quotes on Instagram or Pinterest. It’s not the latest YouTube clip.

It’s one thing and one thing only: remembering we are all going to die soon.

How Many Summers Do You Have Left?

Seneca was a roman philosopher who lived 2000 years ago and a leader of the stoic movement. One of his essays, entitled On the Shortness of Life provides a reminder to all of us: our time here is nearly over.

And yet what Seneca argues, and does so brilliantly, is that life isn’t really short. The problem is how we waste so much of our lives on things that don’t matter: wondering what others think, getting caught up in gossip, wasting our lives on social media and the non-essential.

When this happens, it’s no wonder we lack clarity and meaning in our lives. It’s no wonder we feel overwhelmed, overworked, and overstimulated on a daily basis. When we’re in this place, we don’t have the time or energy to think about death.

And yet, our time is running out. I like to think of it this way:

How many more summers do we have left? How many early June mornings with the sun barely making its presence known as we sip coffee do we have left? How many moments with our kids, family, and those who we love do we have left? How many times do we get to do what we love for yet another day?

We don’t know the answer to this, but I do know one thing: it’s much closer than we think, and every day is a gift. Let’s examine why remembering our own mortality is the best way to start living and how you can use it as leverage to live boldly today.

Ask the Tough Questions

Reminding ourselves of our mortality invites us to ask the tough questions from our lives. These are the questions we often avoid, yet are always running in the background:

Who am I?

Why am I here?

Is this life for me?

Am I on my own path, or someone else’s?

Because they’re uncomfortable, they become easy to avoid through busyness, noise, and the endless demands of a 24/7 digital culture. Usually we don’t take any time to face these questions unless someone close to us experiences a crisis (or we do, too).

But within these questions lie powerful answers. They allow us to get honest with ourselves instead of giving in to the usual mental chatter we so often believe. By asking the tough questions, we start to achieve clarity around what matters… and we start discarding what doesn’t.

Release What Doesn’t Serve

When I moved from New York City to Phoenix, I experienced a wow moment. No, it wasn’t the awe-inspiring sunsets, although I love those. It was the moment I realized my walk-in closet was bigger than my old space in Manhattan.

And yet, I realized as time passed, with all this space, I started to accumulate a lot of stuff. One day, as I was preparing for a meditation (yes, my closet doubled as a brilliant meditation room), I realized: I had no space left. I looked around and noticed I barely used anything that was taking up so much space. I was overwhelmed.

Much like our lives, I had filled my space with the non-essential. Remembering our mortality allows for clarity around releasing what doesn’t serve us. These may be habits, mindsets, environments and yes, even people.

Even just doing this step often releases a heavy burden we feel in our lives: there’s too much going on, and it never ends. Once we have space, we feel lighter, clearer and more empowered to start figuring out what we really want. 

Clarity Around Our Dreams 

“But Tommy…I don’t know, I really don’t know.”

I sat there in a conversation with one of my clients and wasn’t buying it. She was here for a reason, and I wasn’t going to let her off the hook. Of course, I’ve said this before too, and deep down, I was afraid.

My belief is that, deep down, we all know what we want; it’s a matter of the layers we’ve stacked over the years clouding our honesty. This is where using our mortality as leverage truly shines: we get to be honest, unapologetic and share our truth.

Often, we’re afraid to declare what we want for fear of embarrassment, failure, or standing out too much. When faced with our mortality, none of that matters. There’s a dream deep within you waiting to be explored and declared.

The question, then, becomes: Will you have the courage to discover and declare it?

The Power of Urgency

Have you ever had a project due in three months, yet put it off until the last minute and somehow got it all done? We all have. This is the power of urgency, deadlines, and accountability: We get clear, focused, and set boundaries to ensure we finish.

But how often do we do the same with our own lives? Most people don’t operate with any sense of urgency in life; there’s always tomorrow, next week, or next year.

Until there’s not. The beauty of reminding ourselves our time is limited means we’re operating with high levels of urgency, knowing every day truly matters.

When this happens, we say no to the things we should. We tell people how we really feel. And we overcome the resistance on our dreams, the self-doubt, and uncertainty. We feel those yet move forward anyway.

Because the pain of regret hurts more than putting ourselves out there. When this happens, we start to trust ourselves and recognize our dreams are worth it. Best of all: we’re worth bringing them to life.

Integrating This into Your Life 

Steve Jobs, in his riveting Stanford commencement speech, said it better than I ever could:

Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.”

So, how do we use our mortality to make bold decisions and start to live our dreams today? You don’t have to be as extreme as I am with visiting your local cemetery, although I’d recommend it.

Here are some of my favorite ways:

Journal about your legacy.

Take yourself twenty, thirty, or forty years down the line. How do you want to be remembered? Write it all down.

Write a letter to your current self.

Again, fast forward to a time in the future when you’re on your last days. Write a letter to your current self, letting them know whatever you wish.

Do a guided meditation.

There are various meditations around visualizing one’s own death (and return back to Earth). These are beautiful ways to face reality and get in touch with what truly matters.

Spend time with older people.

Strike up conversations with people and even your own family who have been on this planet for a while. Often, you’ll find gems of wisdom within them.

Remind yourself of death once a day.

Every day take a moment and anchor yourself in the beautiful gift we all have. With this energy, ask yourself: What is one bold step I can take today?

It’s your time now.

Embrace your mortality, make the decision you’ve been putting off, and never look back.

About Tommy Baker

Have you ever gotten excited about a bold vision, yet woken up a few weeks later with little to show for it? Tommy Baker helps those with bold dreams reverse engineer their success and create a life they can’t wait to wake up for. He does this through his books, and top-rated podcast: Resist Average Academy. Learn more at http://resistaverageacademy.com.

See a typo or inaccuracy? Please contact us so we can fix it!
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
15 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
ccrgirl
ccrgirl

Wow. Thanks 🙂

RevNagi
RevNagi

Well done, brother! Thank you!

Marion Morassutti
Marion Morassutti

Thank you. I needed this today. My husband was removed by the police this morning. I had had enough and needed to move forward😪

Mary Ann Lumbes
Mary Ann Lumbes

I am thankful that once in my lifetime I have read a very good article like this, I cried, it cuts deep within not with hurt but more of gratitude. Thank you very much Tommy for sharing your extraordinary thoughts, they are life changing and they made me a better human being right at this moment. All the best for you buddy.

David Aguilar
David Aguilar

I contemplate my mortality everyday. It sucks, but like a good atheist I suck it up.
However. I would love for the rest of my life be spent just surfing. Living on a small tiny passive income. Just enough for beans and rice. And just surf until I die. Hopefully within the next 5-10 years. I really have no interest in living past that.

tommy72
tommy72
Reply to  ccrgirl

So glad it connected! Thank you for reading 🙂

tommy72
tommy72

Love this! I find then we face our lives and reality head on —we have more gratitude for the miracles we GET to experience. Appreciate your support and keep going 🙂

Marion Morassutti
Marion Morassutti

Inspirational.😎♥

tommy72
tommy72

Beautiful quote! I completely agree, and reminding ourselves of our mortality is a powerful exercise in perspective, gratitude and remembering to say what needs to be said now —and do what must be done today. Great share.

aanchal
aanchal

This is such a hard hitting article and life has given me experiences to embrace this reality. I follow Buddhism and for someone who has always feared death, I came across a beautiful line that said, the day you accept that death is inevitable, is the day you start living. Your article resonates and reaffirms my thoughts and I hope to make everyday special in whichever way possible. Thank you Tom!

Harriet Cabelly

When my daughter miraculously survived a near-catastrophic medical crisis and fully recovered, my second lease on life began. Post traumatic growth as it’s called invigorated me to live life with a sense of urgency, to take on as much as possible, to open myself up to a world of amazing awe and experiences. If sitting by the bed of a loved one on a ventilator, watching and listening to each beep and blip of the machine providing the oxygen and manual labor for each breath, doesn’t get us to realize that all of our lives hang by a most fragile thread and that there but by the grace of G-d go I, then nothing will. This put death on my shoulders and it has been my greatest guidepost ever since; guiding me towards living life well, with passion and fervor, with gratitude and appreciation, with excitement and limitless possibilities. It is not morbid and as you say is a great motivational tool.
I love your piece and only wish more people would connect with this reality that can serve us well. I love hearing eulogies as they always inspire me towards legacy and living into how I want to be remembered. We can truly live better when we reflect on this. I haven’t gotten to the point of visiting cemeteries but it is all a reality check and wake up call if we can see it like that.

Kiwiburger

Hi Tommy. Thank you for a lovely article. I just completed an amazing task, writing to myself from 30 years in the future. I can’t believe what came up, that I hadn’t identified from my previous journalling. It obviously needed releasing. And to then re read my letter in front of the mirror was incredibly therapeutic. I thoroughly recommend this to any of your readers. Thank you. Go well.

Gomek
Gomek

At 50 years of age, I have never really feared death, as I have seen it first hand on many occasions. My teacher Gangagi has a wonderful seminar on facing death which fits in perfectly with what is written here. I realise at one point in the future, maybe tomorrow or in 20 years, something will happen to stop my heart and send me to being a few pounds of ash to be scattered or put away in a closet or attic for many years. That doesn’t depress me at all. All I worry about is that when I am gone, people knew I tried my best in life despite not having the kind of success most people think makes you great (having a family, being the president of your company, etc). I have had many opportunity’s in my life to be exposed to great music, art and knowledge. I have also had a lot soul crushing heartache. I do have a lot of gratitude and I really do not want for much being I have all I need. That’s doesn’t mean I’m wealthy but for the modest life I have, I am happy with my attainments.

Soul Doors
Soul Doors

Yes! Yes! Yes! I’m going to want to read this again and delve into your suggestions.

Tunya
Tunya

When i was in 1st year of nursing school i was doing great in theory and even though i never wanted to do nursing i was somehow going through it but then the practicals started the clinical postings long hours of standing in the hospital getting scolded by the nurses patients our own mentors and watching various dangerous and gross procedures and having to try it and get scolded and told off if comitted a mistake and there was series of mistakes and also being looked down upon by people, some people did look down but with some people i thought they looked down. I had a slight mental breakdown and i googled lot of things and read all the articles like one of this and suggestions, advices in quora etc etc. I got bolstered to leave nursing. i fought, cried, argued and caused so many problems in order to get out of it. Followed by many events in life and to escape nursing i ended up in bsc agriculture in a university located in an isolated place with the ban in all modern gadgets and also many sites on internet even sites useful for students had a ban. And also no freedom to go out of the campus even for emergencies like medical issues or gouing to a better city library or anything as simple as buying pizza because one have been craving for months. University facilities like the canteen, shop, library sucked it had nothing on it. The students of my class were do uncivilised and behaved like an illiterate. And so many bad things about that college. Now i have a heavy regret and i am drowning on my own regrets that i am unable to move forward and i hate the subjects taught in agriculture (honestly, i am not an agriculture person). I feel so stuck there is financial problem and my father will literally have heart attack if i drop out as he went bankrupt few years ago and he is paying my fees. I ruined all family relationships, friendships everything that i once had. I am a morose now and constantly looking to point fingers even though i know its wrong. So i find such articles very good, motivating, inspiring but look what i did to myself being inspiref by reading one of those. And now i am searching for articles to soothe my situation in life like ” how to live and be alive with doing things that you hate but have no choice.” Or something similar but there is none. All the aricles or books that teaches to be alive is by doing what you love. What happens to people like me?