Everything would become insignificant after a while. If you lived to say, 1,200, a 30 year marriage would seem about as long as a bachelor party. I guess one benefit would be that you could amass wealth/do/create things that you otherwise wouldn't have time to do if you were mortal.
I would probably choose to be immortal given the option but no way I could continue on forever, I'd have to pull my own plug eventually, just my own theory but I think after a while you would go insane.
See, that's what I would be afraid of. On the flip side what if my wife also became an Immortal and stayed with me for 1,000+ years? I think that would almost drive me more insane.
rick and morty
wish they would make some new episodes
Be too. Good thing they are
There's plenty of shit I want to do that will take longer than the average human life span.
Think of it this way: if any of us had been born in say, 1500, would we be bored/want to kill ourselves at this point? Definitely not. If anything, I'd be even more excited as I watched technology develop/new trends emerge/old trends emerge etc etc.
You would definitely need immortal compatriots, though. Otherwise yes, it would be horrible as fuck.
This! There is SO MUCH that I want to see that will just be happening right after my time. Could you IMAGINE having actually KNOWN Jesus? Or to have actually BEEN THERE for the first Thanksgiving? SPACE is the new frontier for Mankind IMO, but that's a different thread entirerly.
Though it is important to note that immortality from old age would make the likelihood of you dying in a horrific accident jump to 100%.
Why is this? I mean, yes, it would literally jump to 100% because I wouldn't get sick or have organ failure or whatever, but this also assumes that the nanobots are constantly repairing our bodies too.