Silicon Canals Reframes Aging Through Helen Mirren’s 80-Year Perspective
Updated
Updated · Silicon Canals · Jul 3
Silicon Canals Reframes Aging Through Helen Mirren’s 80-Year Perspective
1 articles · Updated · Silicon Canals · Jul 3
Summary
Silicon Canals used Helen Mirren’s remark that people either “die young or get old” to argue that aging is a privilege rather than a failure to preserve youth.
The piece grounds that view in demographics: global life expectancy was about 32 years in 1900, and for much of history most people never reached 35.
That contrast underpins its critique of modern anti-aging culture, which treats wrinkles, pain and visible age as personal grievances despite longer lives being a recent historical gain.
Mirren’s emphasis on curiosity — wanting to “see what happens next” — becomes the essay’s broader point: old age is the cost of continued life, not its defeat.