independent and unofficial
Prince fan community
Welcome! Sign up or enter username and password to remember me
Forum jump
Forums > General Discussion > How long do you think you have to live?
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Page 1 of 2 12>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
Author

Tweet     Share

Message
Thread started 09/21/11 9:57am

Deadflow3r

avatar

How long do you think you have to live?

Some people may find this topic morbid and I am sorry about that. Just log on to another thread. Back in March my sister turned 57 and on that day she nearly died and was put into a drug induced coma which lasted nearly a month. She is in amazingly good health now considering she is diabetic and has many other health problems. I think that scare may have actually lengthened her life. She managed to live through it and finally come to terms with what she needed to do to stay healthy.

Meanwhile, this year I turned 50. When I thought that my sister might not make it one of the things that went through my head was "I will finally feel O.K. getting the hell out of this town". I knew there was so many things I wanted to do before I died and yet I did not want to leave and take away my daughter from my sister and visa versa.

As things turned out I left and left my sister behind with my daughter. I have this feeling that basically I have 20 years maybe to live. I will be 70 in 7277 days and I don't want to let them slip by as unconciously as I have the past 20, from age 30 to 50.

So how long do you think you'll be around? Do you have a bucket list? Do you like me get creeped out thinking that eventually you will run out of tomorrows and never even begin to really live your life?

There came a time when the risk of remaining tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. Anais Nin.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #1 posted 09/21/11 9:58am

imago

About 35 to 40 years.

I've reached a spiritual point in my life though where I no longer see it as one life, but a process in the long progression of lives (and personalities---I don't even believe personalities are fixed. Mine will change over this lifetime and the course of future ones).

Ergo, I don't feel too attached to the idea of a long life , etc. anymore.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #2 posted 09/21/11 10:02am

Deadflow3r

avatar

imago said:

About 35 to 40 years.

I've reached a spiritual point in my life though where I no longer see it as one life, but a process in the long progression of lives (and personalities---I don't even believe personalities are fixed. Mine will change over this lifetime and the course of future ones).

Ergo, I don't feel too attached to the idea of a long life , etc. anymore.

Do you feel as if "what i don't finish doing in this lifetime I will get other lifetimes to complete"? Do you think we all have work to do in this lifetime that is specific to us?

There came a time when the risk of remaining tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. Anais Nin.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #3 posted 09/21/11 10:06am

Genesia

avatar

Barring a personal calamity (accident or catastrophic illness), I probably have another 40 to 50 years.

Three of my four grandparents lived to be 90. (One of my grandmas is still living - she'll be 95 in November.) My dad is 79 and my mom will be 75 in November. Even with Parkinson's disease, my mom is very vital and alive. Her disease is controlled well with medication and she still sews and plays golf, as she always has. My dad is very youthful and healthy for his age.

As I said, barring an accident, I'll be around a good, long time.

We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #4 posted 09/21/11 10:10am

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

avatar

My family tends to live pretty long lives and I’m healthier than most. Of course, you never know. If I die tomorrow, I’ll die happy and satisfied with what I’ve got, what I’ve done and the life I’ve lead. My own death doesn’t scare me, but losing loved ones does.

No bucket list, really. I have a handful of things I’d like to see or do, of course, but I make my plans and I do them.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #5 posted 09/21/11 10:14am

Deadflow3r

avatar

Genesia said:

Barring a personal calamity (accident or catastrophic illness), I probably have another 40 to 50 years.

Three of my four grandparents lived to be 90. (One of my grandmas is still living - she'll be 95 in November.) My dad is 79 and my mom will be 75 in November. Even with Parkinson's disease, my mom is very vital and alive. Her disease is controlled well with medication and she still sews and plays golf, as she always has. My dad is very youthful and healthy for his age.

As I said, barring an accident, I'll be around a good, long time.

I have a mixture. My father was a chain smoking drunk and he still made it to a week before his 78th birthday. My mother was 76 when she got struck by a truck in a cross walk in front of her church. She pretty much died instantly, but was revived and then we just took her off of life support. Anyway his family had a ton of very old people in it and hers did not. The church factor made me believe it was "her time". She took very good care of herself and feared becoming helpless; I think it was probably the best way for her to go, instantly.

Anyway, I have 20 last years to accomplish anything. Unless I have the stamina of Betty White the 20 after that will most likely not be productive should I actually have more than 20. I am someone with a great deal of regrets and I don't want to add 20 more years of regrets to my already staggering list.

There came a time when the risk of remaining tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. Anais Nin.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #6 posted 09/21/11 10:18am

Number23

Not too long, hopefully. I'm pretty much done. I'm fairly zen about it. I'm not miserable, just bored with myself - and a natural streak of misanthropy has fed well becoming cancerous to my ability to judge and enjoy company. I see conceit in everyone. I see delusion in everyone. I see a virus in the dark. I think a lot of people go when they feel it's time. The body knows. I don't want to see my parents die either. Fuck that horror.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #7 posted 09/21/11 10:29am

myfavorite

avatar

It how i die, im most concerned with...lol

long and painful in the natural would be fun, but spiritually, hayle no....

quick and fun naturally, but spiritually...that may be best......

horrifically either way is sudden and permananent.....oh gawd why are discussin that dead???

do you understand??..lol

boxed marriage, death, there are some milestones in life i just dont wanna face, i'm just tryin to get thru this thing we call....life....lol

THE B EST BE YOURSELF AS LONG AS YOUR SELF ISNT A DYCK[/r]

**....Someti
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #8 posted 09/21/11 10:35am

imago

Deadflow3r said:

imago said:

About 35 to 40 years.

I've reached a spiritual point in my life though where I no longer see it as one life, but a process in the long progression of lives (and personalities---I don't even believe personalities are fixed. Mine will change over this lifetime and the course of future ones).

Ergo, I don't feel too attached to the idea of a long life , etc. anymore.

Do you feel as if "what i don't finish doing in this lifetime I will get other lifetimes to complete"? Do you think we all have work to do in this lifetime that is specific to us?

unfortunately, no, I do not think that.

There is no guarantee that I will be reborn in a future lifetime to conditions suited for spiritual growth. I may actually digress or become more evil, etc.

The urgency to obtain enlightenment in this lifetime is very real--future lifetimes are no remedy for unobtained dreams or spritual levels. How could they be. All the things that are conditioned in this lifetime (memories as the result of neural connections in the brain, intelligence as the result of learning, etc.) die with the person who possessed them (because he never truly posessed them), only to be rebuilt in a future life.

It's sort of like evolution...there is no master plan that produces a smart being--it's the result of random adaptations. All creatures are not born to just become smarter and more cunning--they merely adapt to environments, whatever they may be.

Anyways, I know this is not a spriitual thread so I'll shut up.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #9 posted 09/21/11 10:38am

Dave1992

Number23 said:

Not too long, hopefully. I'm pretty much done. I'm fairly zen about it. I'm not miserable, just bored with myself - and a natural streak of misanthropy has fed well becoming cancerous to my ability to judge and enjoy company. I see conceit in everyone. I see delusion in everyone. I see a virus in the dark. I think a lot of people go when they feel it's time. The body knows. I don't want to see my parents die either. Fuck that horror.

No homo (although I'm on FreakerFantastic's pink list, which makes me unbelievably gay), but I love you.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #10 posted 09/21/11 10:43am

Dave1992

I'm quite convinced I'll die quite soon. I'm not ill and live quite healithily for the most part. I'm just too keen on finding out what dying is like and what happens afterwards. Sometimes, I'm also terribly bored of people around me and life in general, although my life is probably anything but boring. I just feel that I wouldn't care if I died.

I feel it most when I drive my motorbike through the hills and vinyard-roads. I drive so quickly it's really dangerous and I know, still I don't care. I wouldn't harm other people, though.

I often play with the thought of it all, because I find it really exciting.

Plus, heroes die young, don't they?

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #11 posted 09/21/11 10:47am

Number23

Dave1992 said:



Number23 said:


Not too long, hopefully. I'm pretty much done. I'm fairly zen about it. I'm not miserable, just bored with myself - and a natural streak of misanthropy has fed well becoming cancerous to my ability to judge and enjoy company. I see conceit in everyone. I see delusion in everyone. I see a virus in the dark. I think a lot of people go when they feel it's time. The body knows. I don't want to see my parents die either. Fuck that horror.



No homo (although I'm on FreakerFantastic's pink list, which makes me unbelievably gay), but I love you.


No you dont. You're only projecting conceptulaised notions of your own personality onto a highly distorted and mirrored version of yourself as 'me'. But thank you, the sentiment was very sweet. X
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #12 posted 09/21/11 11:05am

Dave1992

Number23 said:

Dave1992 said:

No homo (although I'm on FreakerFantastic's pink list, which makes me unbelievably gay), but I love you.

No you dont. You're only projecting conceptulaised notions of your own personality onto a highly distorted and mirrored version of yourself as 'me'. But thank you, the sentiment was very sweet. X

Yes, that too. But I mean I really love you. I'd send you roses and shit, buy you dinner, tell you how much I love your fluffy hair (and wouldn't mention how it's thinning) and take you for a walk on the pier in Blackpool. Now if that isn't love, tell me what is!

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #13 posted 09/21/11 11:11am

PurpleJedi

avatar

Well...I consider 80 to be the age where you really start breaking down physically and mentally. When you become so fragile that you can no longer really "live".

So I'm halfway there. Another 40 years.

fart

By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #14 posted 09/21/11 11:21am

Number23

Dave1992 said:



Number23 said:


Dave1992 said:




No homo (although I'm on FreakerFantastic's pink list, which makes me unbelievably gay), but I love you.



No you dont. You're only projecting conceptulaised notions of your own personality onto a highly distorted and mirrored version of yourself as 'me'. But thank you, the sentiment was very sweet. X


Yes, that too. But I mean I really love you. I'd send you roses and shit, buy you dinner, tell you how much I love your fluffy hair (and wouldn't mention how it's thinning) and take you for a walk on the pier in Blackpool. Now if that isn't love, tell me what is!


Ach, compliments are not altruistic - you always want them back. And I'm not thinning lol. It's losing the natural jack in the box voodoo glory of my spring months, aye, but it's still all there. Just a bit knackered from fifteen years of sprays, clays and plays. But Ive never used conditioner. Maybe it's time.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #15 posted 09/21/11 11:22am

paisleypark4

avatar

I always have this frightening sucpicion I will never walk or dance again because I will get hit by a car. Many times I have almost been hit physically alone or in a car...

My mom and dad are stil here...and so is my grandmother and grandfather..who are pushing 80.

I am going to base this on about a span of 30 years..if I am still here by 60 I will be really suprised.

OH, and if it was time for me to pass I would be happy for how I helped others. I wouldnt want to do my life again. If I did want to live another life I would not come back to Earth that's for sure.

[Edited 9/21/11 11:25am]

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #16 posted 09/21/11 11:22am

morningsong

I'd say another 30 to 40 years. But I agree with myfavorite, it's the how that concerns me the most.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #17 posted 09/21/11 11:23am

Number23

What I meant was, altruism is love. Infact, being hated by the person you worship is true love. Unrequited is such a beautiful sounding word too. Lol, eh?
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #18 posted 09/21/11 1:39pm

davetherave676
7

Im ready 2 go...........................Eye welcome death cant wait 2 go!!!!!....If there was a button eye could press 2 end it id press it in a heartbeat.....Death xcites me:excited:

Dave Is Nuttier Than A Can Of Planters Peanuts...(Ottensen)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #19 posted 09/21/11 1:45pm

smoothcriminal
12

God knows. I tend not to think about these kind of things.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #20 posted 09/21/11 1:55pm

DexMSR

avatar

50+ years

The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them. -- Mark Twain.

BOB JOHNSON IS PART OF THE PROBLEM!!
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #21 posted 09/21/11 2:13pm

Javi

Number23 said:

Not too long, hopefully. I'm pretty much done. I'm fairly zen about it. I'm not miserable, just bored with myself - and a natural streak of misanthropy has fed well becoming cancerous to my ability to judge and enjoy company. I see conceit in everyone. I see delusion in everyone. I see a virus in the dark. I think a lot of people go when they feel it's time. The body knows. I don't want to see my parents die either. Fuck that horror.

[Edited 9/21/11 14:53pm]

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #22 posted 09/21/11 2:32pm

JuliePurplehea
d

avatar

Me and my cat are going to live forever.

Shake it til ya make it dancing jig
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #23 posted 09/21/11 2:36pm

paintsprayer

avatar

Thousands of years couldn't be enough

Now I'm older than movies, Now I'm wiser than dreams, And I know who's there
When silhouettes fall
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #24 posted 09/21/11 3:50pm

XxAxX

avatar

i don't think any one of us can know the answer.

  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #25 posted 09/21/11 3:51pm

davetherave676
7

JuliePurplehead said:

Me and my cat are going to live forever.

That was the plan b4 Eve f**ked up.....disbelief

Dave Is Nuttier Than A Can Of Planters Peanuts...(Ottensen)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #26 posted 09/21/11 5:06pm

FuzzyWitch

avatar

davetherave6767 said:

JuliePurplehead said:

Me and my cat are going to live forever.

That was the plan b4 Eve f**ked up.....disbelief

eek what did u do to Morris Day??????????????????????? sad

Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #27 posted 09/21/11 5:10pm

davetherave676
7

FuzzyWitch said:

davetherave6767 said:

That was the plan b4 Eve f**ked up.....disbelief

eek what did u do to Morris Day??????????????????????? sad

Morris Day is doing fine and talking 2 me right...lol

Dave Is Nuttier Than A Can Of Planters Peanuts...(Ottensen)
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #28 posted 09/21/11 5:17pm

FuzzyWitch

avatar

davetherave6767 said:

FuzzyWitch said:

eek what did u do to Morris Day??????????????????????? sad

Morris Day is doing fine and talking 2 me right...lol

i 4got he has 9 lives :phew:

Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else.
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Reply #29 posted 09/21/11 6:00pm

whistle

avatar

i won't see 40 and who would want to?

everyone's a fruit & nut case
  - E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator
Page 1 of 2 12>
  New topic   Printable     (Log in to 'subscribe' to this topic)
« Previous topic  Next topic »
Forums > General Discussion > How long do you think you have to live?