
Best Death And Life Value Quotes
Death And Life Value
Table of Contents
- The Cost of Living and Dying
- Life Insurance and Financial Aspects
- Philosophical Reflections on Death
- Life's Inevitability and Fairness
- Personal Value and Legacy
- Other
The Cost of Living and Dying

Death is the Inevitable Price We Must Pay.
It is not good that surviving is so expensive and life so cheap.
Death is the price you paid for being born.
Staying alive means having to fulfil responsibilities and pay for all the expenses incurred while living. Since when did dying become an expensive affair, I thought to myself. What does it cost for a funeral these days? I embarked on a research and my findings increased my desire to live and crusade against all kinds of negative forces.

Most people die, living their life paycheck to paycheck,trying to stretch out each dollar, as like a roll of toilet paper. Toiling each tissue, never quite wiping away all the shit from their asses, where the world always takes what little they flush, back into its deprived system, always hungry.
Death is not free. Its price is life.
I always knew my death would be a possible consequence of the work I do. But for me it was a price I was willing to pay because this is what I believed in.
The cost of living keeps going up, although death is surprisingly affordable.
I believe the cost of life is Death and we will all pay that in full. Everything else should be a gift.

Is death such a high price to pay, when you will die anyway?
If physical death is the price that I must pay to free my white brothers and sisters from a permanent death of the spirit, then nothing can be more redemptive.
death was the price of life.
Death is the price we pay for life, so make it worth it.
Life Insurance and Financial Aspects

You know, nothing is stronger than blood bonds. What else is the reason for the success of life insurance policies? Why bother with what happens to your blood relatives after your death? After all, you stop existing. Why then bother about what is happening to your kids, and why be concerned about what is happening on Earth even? Well, it’s because, after one’s final exit, one lives through one’s children.
Death is liberating only if one has planned for it. But I think no one truly does, except for a few people with suicidal inclinations, or perhaps, deeply content wandering ascetics. For most of us mortals, life insurance is the one thing that gives us the reassurance of planning well for the event of our death.
Getting life insurance is like making a bet you can't win. If you live, you don't get the money. If you die, you don't get to enjoy the money.
You got to die of something because if you die of nothing, they won't pay your insurance.

Life insurance is an important method of estate transfer to at least consider because death benefits can pass to your heirs essentially free of taxes.
I detest life-insurance agents: they always argue that I shall some day die, which is not so.
Life Insurance Motto - Robbing the widows early and orphan.
Life insurance was created to be an instant estate in the event of the premature death of the breadwinner.
You need life insurance if somebody will suffer financially when you die.

Life Insurance Motto – Robbing the widows early and orphan.
Getting life insurance is like making a bet you can’t win. If you live, you don’t get the money. If you die, you don’t get to enjoy the money.
Death’s stamp gives value to the coin of life; making it possible to buy with life what is truly precious.
Philosophical Reflections on Death

In a world where everyone struggles to survive whatever the cost, how could one judge those who decide to die?
We might never rid ourselves of a lingering anxiety regarding our death; this is a kind of tax we pay in return for self-awareness.
They tell you all the time that life isn’t fair. But if there’s one thing I’ve learned in the past twenty-eight years, it’s that death is even less fair. It’s the one thing in the world that doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t care who you are, how much money you have, what you’ve done in life. It can come for you any time it wants.
Sometimes I think death is even more inevitable than taxes," his grandmother replies bleakly. "Humans don’t live in a vacuum; we’re part of a larger pattern of life.

Death should not be seen as the end but as a very effective way to cut down expenses.
Our own death is a premium which we must pay for the far greater benefit we have derived from the fact that so many people have not only lived but also died before us.
The death of something living is the price of our own survival, and we pay it again and again. We have no choice. It is the one solemn promise every life on earth is born and bound to keep.
Death's stamp gives value to the coin of life; making it possible to buy with life what is truly precious.
Isn’t death a blessing? Doesn’t it define the value of our lives, minute to minute, year to year?

We have long had death and taxes as the two standards of inevitability. But there are those who believe that death is the preferable of the two.
Death is the great equalizer. I’ve seen that phenomenon many times. I’ve had people in my classes come to me, men and women over 50 years old, and they say, “I made it, I’m rich. But what the hell is my life for?”
An awareness of mortality is a heavy price to pay for sentience.
Life's Inevitability and Fairness

Are we so made that we have to take death in small doses daily or we could not go on with the business of living?
It was said that life was cheap in Ankh-Morpork. This was of course, completely wrong. Life was often very expensive; you could get death for free.
The terrible price of living, ain’t it? To live through others dying?
They tell you all the time that life isn’t fair. But if there’s one thing I’ve learned in the past twenty-eight years, it’s that death is even less fair. It’s the one thing in the world that doesn’t discriminate. It doesn’t care who you are, how much money you have, what you’ve done in life. It can come for you any time it wants.

But our mercy has a cost, and it might be our lives.
Someone in the society has to deal with the reality that there are finite resources and we're Making trade-offs, and be explicit about that. When the car companies were found to have a memo that actually said, "This safety feature costs X and saved Y lives," the very existence of that memo was considered damning. Or when you made it reimbursable for a doctor to ask, "Do you want heroic care at the end-of-life," that was a death panel. No, it wasn't a death panel! It was asking somebody to make a decision.
We run after values that, at death, become zero. At the end of your life, nobody asks you how many degrees you have, or how many mansions you built, or how many Rolls Royces you could afford. That's what dying patients teach you.
In today's competitive economy, to stand still is to die.
Life for the majority of the population. Is an unlovely struggle against unfair odds. Culminating in a cheap funeral.

Death means a lot of money, honey. Death can really make you look like a star.
Not to own the means of production can lead to premature death, but not to own the means of representation is also a kind of death. For if we are represented by others, might they not, one day, hose our deaths off memory’s laminated floor?
Death is a dying industry with an economic phenomenon.
Personal Value and Legacy

If you have not already done so, sign a Living Will and have it witnessed, but not by anybody who is going to gain from the Last Will and Testament dealing with your estate. A Living Will, which has nothing to do with property or money, is an advance declaration of your wish not to be connected to life-support equipment if it is judged that you are hopelessly and terminally ill.
Life is a derivative which derives its value from an underlying asset called Death
This is the price we pay, that the only way to take our life is death.
Not to own the means of production can lead to premature death, but not to own the means of representation is also a kind of death. For if we are represented by others, might they not, one day, hose our deaths off memory's laminated floor?

Don't trust those people's who says 'i can die for you' because if they don't even know the value of their own life then how can you expect your value from them.
What a folly to dread the thought of throwing away life at once, and yet have no regard to throwing it away by parcels and piecemeal.
Death itself is too big to take in, she already sees that; the loss comes at you instead in an infinite number of small installments that can never be paid off.
Money is not the issue. Having the courage to give your highest gift is the issue. There is no security in doing something for a living when you are dying inside while doing it. That is taking care of the body at the expense of the soul. And a withering soul cannot help but produce a withering body. So do not think you are 'taking care of yourself' by killing your spirit to keep your body alive. How long will you put off what you are dying to do?
In today’s competitive economy, to stand still is to die.

Death is really no more than the voluntary liquidation of an economy of microscopic free agents, the redemption of the debt of structured life.
The wages of dying are love.
The company you keep at death is, of all things, most dependent on chance.
When we see the bankruptcy, slavery, and vanity of everything else, we can finally say, ‘To die is gain.’
Other

The price of living seems to always be death.
Death cannot be fooled or bought. Best be gone than left to rot.
Being alive always seems to be the price of something.
I just hope my death makes more cents than my life

You got to die of something because if you die of nothing, they won’t pay your insurance.
Not to own the means of production can lead to premature death, but not to own the means of representation is also a kind of death.
More Collections

Friendship Quotes Hub

Sports Team Confidence & Success Quotes

Persistence and Progress

Best Limited Social Circles Quotes

Best Life Quotes

Best Intense Rivalry Games Quotes
Related Articles
Patrick Wright
Software engineer and creator of Quotesperation. I curate wisdom from history's greatest minds to inspire and guide modern life. When I'm not collecting quotes, I'm writing about technology and finding connections between timeless wisdom and today's challenges.

