Most people don’t begin to live until they know they’re going to die.
In 1952, Japanese director Akira Kurosawa explored that uncomfortable truth in his film “Ikiru,” which translates “to live.” The film opens with a quiet, devastating fact: Kanji Watanabe is dying. We know it before he does.
Watanabe has spent decades as a bureaucrat — a section chief in a city office — stamping papers, following procedure, preserving order. His wife is dead. He has devoted his life to saving money and providing for his son. He has done what was expected. He has been respectable. Responsible. Safe.
He has also been spiritually absent from his own life.
When he learns he has cancer and has only months to live, he feels hollow. The routines that once filled his days now feel meaningless. He first tries distraction and pleasure. That fails. Then, almost accidentally, he discovers something different: purpose. He throws himself into one small but meaningful public project and finds, at last, a sense of peace.
In the final image we see of him, he sits alone on a swing in the snow, softly singing a song from his youth about how brief life is. It is one of the most haunting scenes ever filmed — not because of tragedy, but because of clarity. He has finally awakened.

Blind faith in our ability to reason led to arrogance, false certainty
I’ve struggled to finally believe there’s more than one ‘right way’
Peace won’t come until you quit obeying long-gone programmers
What will you do when ‘electing the right people’ doesn’t change things?
What can a free society do before an unstable person commits a crime?
UPDATE: Judge drops charges against Diane Tran; $100,000 raised
Love’s closest counterfeit sounds like love but acts like selfish need