Living Forever Is Awesome

"Susan: Well, Who Wants to Live Forever?? Marcus: I do, actually."

- Babylon 5

Who Wants to Live Forever? You do? Well, Immortality is no picnic: living to see all your childhood friends and great grandchildren die, having to drift from place to place or be chased out of town as a witch, and have to crawl across the Sahara for three weeks without food or water with a broken leg because you can't die.

But hey! You're alive! And you know what? Living Forever Is Awesome!

Want to learn to speak Swahili? You have the time! Care to take up bungee jumping? No fear! Literally, your pain and threat reflexes will be burned out by the second century. Speaking of: all that stuff about eternity being boring? Have you seen the last hundred years? (and the future sure ain't slowing down either) Money can come and go, but will mostly come since you have an infinite time horizon over which to accumulate wealth and make investments, and you'll always be around to enjoy it! As for the ones you'll love and lose—well, "Kiss today goodbye, and point me towards tomorrow." Try not to forget your old friends, but don't let that shut you out from the amazing people you can and will meet! Besides, in some universes, death is more boring than life could ever be, or is too terrifying to consider. Basically, rather than Sour Grapes griping, the immortal character decides to see the upside of Immortality and actually enjoys it. It may not be a bed of roses, but life can be good. Because really, how can life ever get boring if it's always changing?

See also Eternal Love, which may be a contributing factor to enjoying immortality. Contrast Who Wants to Live Forever?. Rarely overlaps with Immortality Immorality, even though the "immoral" character usually expects that living forever will be awesome.

Anime and Manga

 * Firo Prochainezo from Baccano! literally sums up his thoughts about being "cursed" with immortality as, "WOOHOO!" and even manages to talk his 200-year-old, world-weary mentor into trying to enjoy it again. Seventy-two years later, he's still using the fact that he can bleed in reverse as a party trick. Isaac and Miria freaked out a little bit when they figured it out seventy years later, but adjusted quickly and had a great time, for example, being Dollars.
 * from Basilisk has a parasite living inside his body that grants him immortality  and is shown to greatly enjoy it, even going so far as to gloat about it towards opponents who thought they killed him.
 * Tenchi Muyo! is made of this trope. The message essentially being: Immortality is great as long as you have a family of other immortals to spend it with, and you all really like each other.
 * Lordgenome spends his endless life raising kids, spawning beasts, suppressing revolts and has fun doing all three.
 * Trigun's Vash doesn't age, and while he has a lot of angst none of it stems from this fact. He's a happy and goofy guy when his brother's not giving him grief.
 * Brought up by Kurt Godel in Mahou Sensei Negima. While everyone else is busy being all depressed about how someone immortal will outlive everyone they know, the idea simply thrills him instead. No need to worry about assassination, the ability to maintain an iron grip on the world for as long as you like... However, he was in the minority opinion on that one. On the other hand, Evangeline sure seems pleased with her immortality, though it's implied that when she was younger that wasn't the case. If anything, she probably wishes she could still be immortal, only with a body that was ten years older.
 * All of the robots that want to eat Cashern are this trope. They're pissed because they were enjoying immortality and now they can't because of the Ruin.

Comic Books

 * The elves and trolls in Elf Quest may count, since they're all either immortal or very long-lived. None of them ever seems to complain about life getting boring (some of them are too busy trying not to get killed anyway), except the Glider elves who are bored and decadent. Some of the elves do strike up bittersweet friendships with short-lived humans, though.
 * Notably, the bored Gliders are the oldest living elves, except for
 * It doesn't help much that the Gliders' society is completely stagnant. They stopped having kids a long time ago, as elven fertility is notoriously low even in tribes that don't have a death rate of zero; they all live inside a mountain they've shaped to their own liking, which keeps them both protected and completely isolated; and the best source of entertainment they have is a giant stone egg that details their history. Go Mad From the Isolation indeed.
 * Hob Gadling in The Sandman. Morpheus makes a deal with Hob: he doesn't die, but they meet every hundred years in the same tavern. The first hundred years, Hob tells Morpheus he got married and had a son. Second time, he's poor, his son's dead, he can't remember his wife's (also dead) name or face, he generally looks the picture of misery, the kind of guy the Pope would gladly Mercy Kill. Morpheus asks if Hob wants to die... to which Hob smiles and says "Of course not". And centuries later, when Death comes to see Hob to and asks if he wants to die, he still says no.
 * Hob seems to ultimately manage because he accepts that life has both ups and downs so there's no point in despairing completely during the bad parts or expecting the good times to last forever.


 * The Eternal Flame from Troy Hickman's Common Grounds was the man to whom Prometheus gave fire to. It gave him power over fire and immortality. He becomes a superhero and is still able to enjoy his immortal life.
 * All of the Century Babies in Warren Ellis' Wildstorm universe, including Elijah Snow from Planetary and Jenny Sparks from Stormwatch and The Authority, greatly enjoy their agelessness.
 * The Archons in The Secret History may go through a lot of shit, but hey, they still more or less control world events. And Reka gets to bed famous men throughout history.
 * Vandal Savage occasionally has bouts of weariness concerning his existence, but for the most part he really gets a kick out of being an evil immortal bastard. He's got an entire world he hasn't conquered yet and enemies that are still alive after all. Most telling is that Vandal could end his immortality but he doesn't.

Fan Works

 * A fanfiction from The Elder Scrolls, I, Eternity follows a vampire who runs through first Who Wants to Live Forever? and then gradually comes around to this as time passes.
 * Undocumented Features, like Tenchi Muyo!, says that living forever is great if you are spending it with other immortals who care about you.
 * The Pirates of the Caribbean fanfic Jack To The Future postulates that Captain Sparrow successfully located and used the Fountain of Youth, achieved Type II immortality, and spent the next few centuries participating in various historical events. This includes both positive and negative experiences, but overall he seems to be having a good time.
 * Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality has Harry himself take this stance and give a long list of the things he would do with his time to Dumbledore, in answer to his Who Wants to Live Forever? position - not only for himself, but for everybody on Earth. He even dreams of the very idea of death becoming a grim story that children aren't told until they're old enough to take it.
 * A Hero: Daleks, who are perpetually at war with everything, consider a long life a mark of great skill.
 * In the epilogue to the Worm/Harry Potter crossover A Wand for Skitter, set five billion years in the future, we learn that Muggle science unlocked immortality in the middle of the 21st century. It's implied that every human is now immortal -- including Taylor Hebert and other persons who were born in the 20th century -- and that it led to a multi-billion-year Golden Age for humanity, Wizard and Muggle alike.

Film

 * In The Man From Earth, the immortal John Oldman makes the best of eternity, gathering huge amounts of knowledge over the centuries.
 * Highlander, despite being the Trope Namer for Who Wants to Live Forever?, apparently as even after thousands of years immortals are willing to kill each other to preserve their own immortality. That may be the system but they could always opt out by, you know, dying. Or, ironically, killing all the other immortals.
 * Star Wars Series - R2-D2 has survived the entire series and according to the Star Wars Expanded Universe is still alive to this day.
 * Casca, the eponymous mercenary of Casca the Eternal Mercenary, is rather satisfied with his immortality as a whole although he has his occasional moments of regretting it when stuck in a Fate Worse Than Death like being buried alive for decades.
 * Groundhog Day plays with this trope. The main character goes back and forth between enjoying and despairing over his situation. But its a bit different from standard immortality since he's living the same day over and over which obviously has different advantages and drawbacks.

Literature

 * Invoking this trope is one of the stated goals of the Duumvirate stated goals. They refer to it as "going to the future". Their rejuvenated fifty-year-old creator strongly agrees.
 * Several of the Old Gods in American Gods seem to still enjoy their eternal life immensely, despite their lack of worshipers cutting their powers down to the barely-superhuman level. Most notably, of course, is Anansi, who is always enjoying life, even on those occasions when he's (temporarily) dead.
 * Woodrow Wilson Smith, of Robert A. Heinlein's Time Enough for Love, once he finds something he hasn't done before.
 * For the most part, the sorcerors of the Belgariad seem perfectly content with eternal life. This is in part because they keep very, very busy. (One, Senji, doesn't even notice he's immortal until he takes a break from trying to turn lead into gold and realizes several centuries have passed.) Not all of them were so content. Of course, those ones are not around anymore.
 * And those who hated their life usually had another reason than immortality to hate it. For one, it was the horrors of war.
 * Peter Pan enjoys milking every bit of fun out of eternal youth. It probably helps that his memory spans an average of five minutes.
 * In Twilight Bella finds no qualms at all to be spending all eternity with her teenage husband and super-quick aging daughter.
 * Tarzan and a few of his friends attain eternal life and youth by stealing some immortality pills from one novel's Big Bad (he cannot share immortality with the world, due to the pill's morally dubious manufacturing method). Tarzan has a very upbeat, "seize the day" mindset and is completely unbothered by the consequences of his immortality. When asked by someone if the thought of all his friends growing old and dying bothers him, he replies that the promise of making new friends makes up for it. When asked if he is worried about boredom Tarzan replies that he lives such an exciting life he doesn't worry about it.
 * In Aleksandr Zarevin's Lonely Gods of the Universe, not one person (either human or Ollan) who has become immortal after eating Ambrosia (it's a plant, not a drink) regrets being mortal. Yes, women become sterile (see Immortal Procreation Clause), but they don't really care. Men can still father children with mortals (and have). Their lives get even better after they eliminate monogamy among themselves (at the women's request) and just have giant orgies. They have a limited supply of Ambrosia and no way to get more, so they have to hand it out sparingly, but one full dose is enough to heal any injury (even regrow lost limbs) and restore youth, as well as grant eternal life. A partial dose will only do the first two.
 * Not quite living forever, but pretty much everyone agrees that Prolong, an anti-aging treatment in the Honor Harrington stories which extends the active human life to around three centuries is pretty damn awesome. Amongst other things it lets you spend fifty or so years in a Naval career and still have over two centuries left to do other things if so desired.
 * In the Iron Druid Chronicles Atticus is more than two thousand years old and he is still enjoying his life enormously. It helps that he is an earth druid so he has a very close bond with nature which grounds him and preserves his sanity. The werewolves also seem to enjoy their long lives.
 * The Others in Night Watch almost never have regrets about their unnaturally long lives. However, most of them try to avoid having children so as not to have to watch them grow old and die. An Other's child can become an Other, but this has about as much chance of happening as an Other born from Muggles. The only exception are vampires and werewolves, who turn their children, but they are the lowers of the low in the Dark Other hierarchy.

Live-Action TV

 * The Doctor in Doctor Who experiences a lot of heartbreak, but still feels that life is worth living so long as there's something left to see in the Universe. Also, the Face of Boe, to an extent.
 * In Torchwood, Captain Jack Harkness in general, really. Sure, he has sometimes-angst over it, but considering his average deaths per episode count, he sure is getting his money's worth out of the deal. Also, more time to go hit on people.
 * Brutally deconstructed in The Miracle Day arc, where (almost) everyone on Earth becomes unable to die. Even suicide bombers are still alive, despite being charred beyond recognition. Also, while people stop dying, no one actually stops aging. Inversely, Jack loses his immortality and has the time of his (very long) life, although now he insists on using condoms.
 * The Middleman has Cecil Rogers, in the episode "The Cursed Tuba Contingency". He's been cursed to wander the earth unaging ever since he kicked some people out of a lifeboat on the Titanic, and says that, actually, he thinks this is pretty neat.
 * A good number of Immortals in Highlander: The Series seem to be having a grand old time; sure, they have problems, but they still enjoy their lives. The protagonist is a major exception—but he'll still fight tooth and nail to survive.
 * In Can You Live Forever?, Adam's greatest regret after his first thousand years is that his children all died before his 132nd birthday. However, he loves to show off his collection of awards and spare bodies.

Manhwa

 * In The Legend of Maian, most of the Regis Knights, immortal super warriors who can't die till their also-immortal master dies. Full stop.

Music
"I am immortal. I have inside me blood of kings. I have no rival. No man can be my equal. ''Take me to the future of your world!"
 * One of the songs Queen wrote for Highlander, "Princes of the Universe", is about how the Immortals are cool(a contrast to the song that names Who Wants to Live Forever?):

"Who's the man who stole fire for the people? Who causes trembling in the bones of evil? Who carved a mountain into a cathedral? I am immortal."
 * The song "Immortal" by Clutch makes it sound pretty awesome:

"Eu nasci há dez mil anos atras... (I was born 10000 years ago) ...Eu vi Cristo ser crucificado... (I saw Christ crucified) ...Vi Babilônia ser riscada do mapa... (I saw Babylon be wiped off the map) ...Eu vi conde Dracula sugando sangue novo... (I saw Dracula drinking blood) ...Eu tava junto com os macacos na caverna...(I was with the monkeys on the cave) ...Eu vi a estrela de Davi brilhar no céu (I saw the Star of David shine in the sky)"
 * The Brazilian song "Eu nasci ha 10000 atras" (I was born 10000 years ago) by Raul Seixas is (obviously) about a man born 10000 years ago who talks about famous events he witnessed. He sounds very enthusiastic about his life:
 * The Brazilian song "Eu nasci ha 10000 atras" (I was born 10000 years ago) by Raul Seixas is (obviously) about a man born 10000 years ago who talks about famous events he witnessed. He sounds very enthusiastic about his life:

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

 * A feature of the afterlife in many religions.
 * By necessity. If it were boring, people might decide they'd rather believe in Cessation of Existence.
 * Of course, some people characterize it as an eternity spent praising whatever god is in question, while others simply consider it a Time Abyss without a whole lot to distinguish it from regular life. Some may call it Heaven, but others would call it Hell. Consequently, the latter of those hope for Cessation of Existence.

Tabletop Games

 * The long-lived and nigh-immortal Eldar of Warhammer 40,000 fight tooth and nail to survive. Granted, it's not so much that Living Forever Is Awesome but rather that dying is much much worse. If Eldar are lucky they will have their souls trapped in crystals for all eternity. Otherwise, they become the playthings of the Chaos god Slaanesh.
 * The Mummies of the Old World of Darkness are generally of this opinion. They might live in a Crapsack World and have often difficult battles against terrifying foes but hey, they have literally all the time in the world to put things right and plenty to enjoy along the way.

Video Games
""I plan to live forever, of course, but barring that I'd settle for a couple thousand years. Even five hundred would be pretty nice.""
 * The Longevity Vaccine and Clinical Immortality projects from 'Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, The Longevity Vaccine will eliminate 1 to 2 Drones and/or boost your economy by 50% based on your economic model, and Clinical Immortality nets you a free Talent at every base plus 50% more votes in elections. It helps that these are presumably widely available treatments, meaning everyone lives forever and the worst aspect of Who Wants to Live Forever?, the losing people you love, is not a problem.

- CEO Nwabudike Morgan, Morganlink 3D-Vision Interview


 * Interestingly, the novelizations claim that the treatments are only available to the higher-ups. This handwaves why the faction leaders are still alive after centuries of rule.
 * The guy who constructs the training courses in Immortal Defense seems to think this.
 * Many characters in the Touhou series are happy with their immortality.
 * Yuyuko used her superpower of instant death to (somehow) permanently remove herself from the cycle of life and death, trapping her in the netherworld to seal a world-devouring evil spirit in a tree, and now lives quietly whenever she isn't causing trouble to sate her boredom. Although her canonical Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass nature makes it hard to tell for sure, she seems to generally enjoy her eternal un-life, especially when it comes to teasing her overly-earnest subordinate, Youmu.
 * Shiki Eiki Yamaxanadu and Komachi, as judge of the dead, and ferrywoman of the equivalent of the River Styx, never really seem to complain about "outliving" everyone they know, but then, being Anthropomorphic Personifications of death and rebirth, and the knowledge of how the afterlife works may give them a radically different perspective on the whole thing.
 * Kaguya and (probably) Eirin, seem to be enjoying immortality quite a bit. Kaguya seems to mostly suffer from boredom, but has had Eirin taking care of her essentially her whole life. She also has mortal, if extremely long-lived servants, but she seems not to care about them to the point of calling any and all of them "Inaba", rather than learning their names.
 * Fairies may have the most amusing of all immortalities—they are functionally immortal as long as the force of nature that they represent still exists. They, however, are all permanently child-like, and spend all eternity playing pranks on one another, don't bother with notions like owning any property they don't wear on their backs (if clothing doesn't just magically appear on them in the first place, it's not like they would manufacture all the frilly dresses they wear) not really understanding the difference between yesterday and ten thousand years ago.
 * To be specific, they have Type IV immortality: they simply regenerate after being killed, exactly the same as Kaguya and Mokou, the latter being a tragic inversion of this trope.
 * In Raidou Kuzunoha vs. the Soulless Army, Crazy Awesome Mad Scientist Doctor Victor is made of this. He gets his wish in Soul Hackers.
 * Soul Calibur - Zasalamel, who had previously been all about Who Wants to Live Forever?, gets to see a vision of mankind's far future in the fourth game and decides to keep his immortality instead of ending it to see the advance of mankind. We get a scene of him as a rich businessman with a helicopter in the 21st century in the end.
 * The basic premise behind the ending of Lost Odyssey.
 * When Parsec the Fire Dragon asks Aphelion the Silver Dragon why he defends the humans, his reply is pretty much 'it's unfair that dragons and elves get to live forever when humans don't.' His ultimate goal involves extending his own immortal life.
 * Sylvanas Windrunner from World of Warcraft used to be all Who Wants to Live Forever?. After getting a taste of The Nothing After Death all evil Undead are doomed to visit when their undeath ends, she's decided that an unending undead existence isn't that bad in comparison.
 * Before that, in Warcraft 3 Arthas also was looking forward to living forever.
 * Glados's final song in the end of Portal 2 has a tinge of that, though many speculate that it hides her bitter hatred at her own existence and that she just sent the closest thing she had to a friend away.
 * Most of the Daedra, especially the Daedric Princes, of The Elder Scrolls series rather enjoy their immortality. A good example is Sanguine, who basically just lives to have fun. His quest in Skyrim could be described as an Elder Scrolls version of The Hangover or Dude, Where's My Car?.

Web Comics
"You know in those stories there's this immortal guy and they talk about how bored they are and how boring life is after 5000 years or whatever? I am going to call something. I am going to call SHENANIGANS."
 * Dinosaur Comics: T-rex isn't a fan of the Who Wants to Live Forever? trope.


 * The Kingfisher: Most of the vampires in this comic show no signs of boredom or guilt at the prospect of immortality. Dragomir vampires especially seem to enjoy eternal life.

"Waldorf: Well, living forever looks pretty good. Statler: You know what'll be the best part? Waldorf: Why, making fun of everything! Both: Do-ho-ho-ho-hoh!"