People talk about health
as if it’s something you can optimize.
Better habits.
Better numbers.
Better routines.
But the more I think about health,
the more fragile it feels.
What would an ossan think about health?
Ossan’s answer
An ossan learns this slowly:
Health is not something you build.
It’s something you stop breaking.
When you are younger,
you treat your body like a tool.
Push it.
Ignore it.
Borrow from tomorrow.
Most of the time,
nothing happens.
Until it does.
An ossan doesn’t chase perfect health.
He watches for signals.
Poor sleep.
Lingering pain.
A mind that doesn’t settle.
Health leaves quietly.
It doesn’t announce itself.
That’s why people miss it.
An ossan doesn’t ask,
“How can I become healthier?”
He asks,
“What am I doing
that makes things worse?”
Removing one bad habit
often matters more
than adding ten good ones.
Health is not about control.
It’s about listening.
And listening takes time.