What Is Life?
Let’s begin with the obvious: you’re alive. Congratulations. You’ve made it at least this far, which—statistically speaking—already sets you apart from a vast number of missed opportunities at the very beginning of your existence.
But what does it actually mean to be alive?
Is it the way your coffee goes cold just as you remember it? The quiet realization that your gym membership remains largely symbolic? Or is it something deeper?
Science offers a definition: life grows, reproduces, responds to stimuli, and maintains homeostasis.
Technically precise. Not especially illuminating.
Plants are alive, yet they do not worry about their carbon footprint. Bacteria are alive, yet they do not curate online identities. Humans, meanwhile—equipped with self-awareness—spend a remarkable amount of time wondering whether they are living their “best life,” while simultaneously searching for instructions on how to fold a fitted sheet.
Philosophy does not simplify matters.
Existentialists argue that meaning is something we create ourselves—an idea that is both liberating and slightly unsettling. Religions offer structured answers, though consensus remains elusive. And science, for all its rigor, ultimately describes mechanisms rather than meaning.
So what is life?
It is, perhaps, the strange condition of being conscious at all. A self-aware organism on a moving planet, assigning importance to fleeting moments. It is the small victories—keeping a plant alive, remembering an appointment—and the equally small absurdities that accompany them.
In the end, life may be less about defining it and more about experiencing it.
It unfolds while plans are made, revised, and forgotten. It exists somewhere between intention and distraction.
So take a moment. Pay attention. If nothing else, that, at least, seems to be part of it.