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The Hoax of the Future

1 December 202513 November 2025

We spend most of our lives chasing a moment that never arrives. From the time we’re old enough to understand language, we’re told to prepare—for school, for exams, for university, for work, for marriage, for retirement. Every step is a prelude to the next. We grow up waiting for life to begin, not realizing it’s already happening.

The truth is, if you can’t live fully in the present, the future becomes an illusion—a mirage that keeps you moving but never lets you drink. You’ll make plans, chase goals, tick off milestones, and still wake up feeling like there’s somewhere else to get to, something else to achieve before you can rest. You’ll say, “Once I get there, then I’ll be happy.” But when “there” comes, it quietly shifts again, always one step ahead.

It’s how we were trained. From kindergarten to graduation, the system teaches us to aim for the next stage, the next level, the next reward. Childhood becomes a rehearsal for adulthood. Work becomes a race toward retirement. And by the time that long-awaited rest finally arrives, many find that their bodies and minds are too tired to enjoy it. The promise of future fulfillment turns out to be a trick we played on ourselves.

What’s missing is play—the ability to find joy and fascination in what we’re doing right now. Somewhere along the line, we split life into “work” and “play,” and convinced ourselves that only one of those was serious. We work for money, not meaning. We work so we can afford leisure, then spend leisure recovering from work. And though most of us have more comfort and wealth than our ancestors ever dreamed of, we often have less capacity to enjoy it. Pleasure isn’t a thing you can buy; it’s a skill you cultivate.

We were never taught how to live, only how to prepare to live. But preparation has no end—it keeps reinventing itself, keeping us on the treadmill of “not yet.” Maybe the point isn’t to escape the treadmill, but to step off it mentally, right where we are. To live now, not for what might come next.

Because the future isn’t waiting for us to arrive. It’s just a shadow cast by the present—and if we can’t see the light where we stand, we’ll spend a lifetime chasing what was already here all along.

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