Depth Over Breadth
If you know me, you likely know that I take my health seriously. When it comes to my personal values and their ranking, Health comes in #2. Why? Is it that I want to live a long time? Perhaps that is a part of it, but only a small part.
The quantity of time I have is so uncertain, and much of it outside my control, that my personal goal is far more about increasing the quality of those years I end up getting in this life. For me, health is far more about “healthspan,” i.e., extending the years in which I am healthy, than “lifespan,” which could technically just be giving me more years, but those additional years as sickly and immobile.
The healthier I am now, the healthier I will we at each step, and the more I will be able to enjoy the days I am given. As with so much else, this was a sentiment the Stoics understood and lived by well before I came to my own realization of its importance in my own life. Two thousand years ago Seneca wrote: “Life is like a play: it’s not the length, but the excellence of the acting that matters.”
The better my health at any given moment, the better my “acting” will be. The more present and capable I will be when it comes to playing with my child (children?) and perhaps grandchildren or even great grandchildren. It isn’t how long I take up space on this planet, but rather doing what I can to ensure I can enjoy each moment I get as it comes to me.
This idea of depth over breadth has applications beyond just health. Clearly it applies in our diet, loading up on empty calories being far worse for us than smaller amounts of healthier food, and in how we work out, with high intensity interval training of short duration providing far more benefit than hours in gym chatting and texting between sporadic sets.
The same is just as true when it comes to other “nutrition” we might consume. What we read, watch, listen to. Whom we “follow,” and what we do with what we learn from them. You can read 200 books in a year, but if you take nothing of substance from them, you are worse off than the person who slogged through a single book, but who learned and acted upon what they learned from that one book and actively improved their life as a result. Our “diet,” food-based or otherwise, benefits just as much from a focus on depth over breadth as other areas of our lives.
And so it is with each day we receive. We can wake up, and go through the motions, mindlessly adding another tick next to the days on our life’s calendar. Or we can wake up recognizing and appreciating the gift that this day, and this day alone is. We can savor each moment we get in it. Sure, there will be times during the day that may seem mundane, but they will remain mundane only if we do not mindfully give them the depth that is possible in every second of our lives.
Our life’s breadth is only partially in our control. Our life’s depth lies within our own hands, or rather, in our heads. Now the question for each of us is how deep are we willing to go?









