Why are great investors often very long-lived?


1. Long-term thinking reduces anxiety
Great investors naturally think in terms of ten or twenty years and are not panicked by short-term market fluctuations. Chronic anxiety is the leading killer of health, and their way of thinking itself is a form of "stress resistance training."
2. Lifelong learning keeps the brain active
Warren Buffett reads every day, and Charlie Munger is still reading and writing at 92. Continuous intellectual activity can delay brain aging and reduce the risk of cognitive decline.
3. Wealth eliminates underlying pressures
Poverty, debt, and medical anxiety are major factors that shorten lifespan. Their wealth allows them to worry less about survival and access the best medical resources.
4. Sense of purpose and ongoing goals
Warren Buffett is still managing Berkshire Hathaway at 94, and George Soros remains active. People with a sense of mission and goals tend to live longer — this is well-supported by psychological research.
5. Calm lifestyle, no overexertion
Most of them do not need frequent travel or social engagements, maintain regular routines, and are even quite "boring." Buffett says his favorite daily activity is "sitting in a chair and thinking."
A peaceful mindset + continuous reflection + clear life goals + sufficient resources together create these "aging better and becoming more valuable" investment legends.
And look at the opposite cases:
As shown in Figure 2
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