RICH IN MOMENTS THAT MATTER

[3 ways to avoid regret at age 90]

“We have two lives, and the second begins when we realize we only have one.” —Confucius. Today’s newsletter is all about making the most of the one we have.

Before we dive in, big thanks to today’s sponsor, Artlist.

As a content creator and a marketing leader at Google, I have a pretty unique perspective on AI (and how it will change the future for creatives).

Artlist just released their annual trend report— and they captured my exact thoughts on this. As AI tools become more sophisticated, we're seeing a powerful resurgence of human creativity. A “human renaissance,” if you will.

Read their 5 AI trends for 2025 here.

CONTEXT

On Friday, I gave a TEDx Talk in a 2,000-person theater. 🥹 And I could not be more grateful for the opportunity— or proud of myself. Thank you to everyone who attended live! (Hopefully I’ll be able to share the recording in 2025.)

One small section of the Talk made me think of an incredible essay called “The Tail End” by Tim Urban.

Tim starts the essay with this simple chart of a human lifespan (in units of weeks). One box = one week.

Tim was 34 at the time, so imagine more than 1/3 of those weeks “crossed out” for him.

But rather than measure the rest of his life in # of weeks, he measures it in activities.

For example, he said he has “a little under 60 winters left.”

or

“I read about 5 books a year, so even though it feels like I’ll read an endless number of books in the future, I actually have only 300 left.”

or

“I tend to limit myself to around one ocean swim a year. So as weird as it seems, I might only go in the ocean 60 more times.”

But here’s the profound part…

THE PROFOUND PART

Some moments decrease dramatically over time.

Like, days spent with parents.

Let’s say you see your parents 6 times per year (one weekend every other month). But before college, you saw them pretty much every day.

Assuming they live healthily into their 90s, you only have 360 more days together… total.

Read that again. 👀

6 weekends (12 days) per year x 30 more years = 360 days.

Let that sink in.

Now, compare those 360 days to your first 18 years of seeing them ~every day. The time you spent with them before you graduated high school (7k days) was 95% of your total time with them over the course of your life…

You’re now enjoying the last 5% of your total in-person hangouts. This is the “tail end.

As Tim says, “despite not being at the end of your life, you may very well be nearing the end of your time with some of the most important people in your life.”

So what do we do with that wake-up call? (Besides try to invent time travel…)

CLOSING THOUGHTS

Here are my 3 takeaways:

1). Try to live close to the people you love.

We probably see the people who live in the same city 10x as often as we see the people who live a flight away.

I’ve told a few friends about this framework. And I kid you not— after I explained it, they decided to move across the country to be closer to their parents (or moved their parents closer to them). They’re so much happier now. Minimizing future regret is a powerful thing.

2). Don’t leave time together up to chance.

Schedule the dates when you’ll see the most important people in your life throughout 2025. Seriously, start planning it now (so your calendar won’t accidentally become too busy to see them).

3). Be mindful of how little time you have left together.

If you’re in your last 10% of time with someone you love, try to be more aware of it. And make every day with them count.

Plan new things to do together. Ask them interesting questions. Tell them how you feel about them (to an embarrassingly frequent extent).

Life’s too short for things to go left unsaid. And these are the moments that matter most.

Btw, you can find the original article by Tim Urban here. I hope you enjoy the illustration of how many dumplings he has left to eat in his lifetime.

Until next week,

Jade

Side note— people ask me all the time which newsletter tool I’d recommend. Beehiiv, hands down. (Sign up with that link for a bonus)

P.P.S. If you’re new to The Quiet Rich, hello! Learn the 8 things that the quietly rich don’t do in this LinkedIn post. 💰 🎉