Ageing Well: Remaining the Subject of Your Own Life
We tend to think of ageing as something that happens to us. Muscles weaken, bones thin, memory slows, and the world gradually narrows. In this picture, the person is a passive recipient of biological forces beyond their control — a spectator watching the clock wind down. But this picture, however familiar, is incomplete. And accepting it uncritically may be one of the most consequential mistakes we make in how we approach the final decades of life. Ageing is indeed an involution — a real, objective reduction in biological reserves. Connective tissue loses elasticity, energy systems become less efficient, neural networks thin, and the margin for error shrinks. This is not pessimism; it is biology. But within these objective limits, there remains an enormous space of ways in which the later trajectory can unfold. The script is not fixed. And that distinction — between the fact of involution and the shape it takes — is where everything important happens. Modern medicine has become extraor...