
36.3M
CAI was wishing winter away today. My hands had gone completely white again from the cold, Raynaud’s doing what it always does this time of year, and I made an offhand comment about it to the guy at the checkout in M&S, “I can’t wait until it starts to get warmer”, when he looked up and said, “I know… but we shouldn’t wish it away.”
It caught me off guard, because it was quietly true. We spend so much of our lives wishing time forward, wishing seasons to end, wishing ourselves into a future version of life where things feel easier, warmer, calmer, better. We tell ourselves we’ll enjoy things more then, when the next phase arrives, when the discomfort passes.
But longevity, real longevity, isn’t just about adding years to a life. It’s about being present for the one you’re living. In the longest-living communities in the world, purpose and gratitude aren’t just concepts or motivational affirmations; they’re woven into daily life in ordinary, unremarkable ways. Not by pretending everything is perfect, but by recognising that even the inconvenient moments count, even the cold mornings and numb fingers and small exchanges with strangers.
Standing there, hands slowly warming as the blood returned, I realised how often we rush ourselves through our own lives without meaning to. We don’t need to fully love every part, but we do need to stop trying to skip them, and remember each moment is important in some way. Because a life you don’t constantly wish away is one you get to fully live in, and that, in the end, might be one of the most powerful habits for a long and meaningful life.
@cazmcnazhypnotherapy










