Most of Our Opinions Won’t Matter in 100 Years

Every day, people lose friendships over opinions.
Politics. Religion. Social issues. Money. Parenting. Business.
We argue. Defend. Attack. Cancel. Unfriend.
But here’s a humbling thought:
In 100 years, most of the things we passionately argue about today probably won’t matter very much.
Most of us will be gone.
The world will be completely different.
New generations will face new problems, new debates, and new opinions.
Yet many people are sacrificing valuable relationships over temporary disagreements.
That’s sad.
Somewhere along the way, society forgot how to disagree respectfully.
Today, if someone thinks differently, people often assume they are ignorant, dangerous, or immoral. Social media has made it worse. Outrage gets rewarded. Kindness rarely goes viral.
But maturity is not surrounding yourself only with people who agree with you.
Maturity is being able to disagree without hatred.
You do not have to agree with someone politically to value them as a human being.
You can disagree spiritually and still respect their sincerity.
You can see life differently and still love each other deeply.
Some of the best friendships are between people who think differently but choose kindness over ego.
The truth is, all of us are learning. All of us are imperfect. All of us have changed our minds about things over the years.
Humility matters.
Instead of trying to win every argument, maybe we should try harder to understand people.
At the end of life, very few people will wish they had won more online debates.
But many will wish they had loved better.
Been kinder.
Listened more.
Forgiven faster.
“Agree to disagree” is not weakness.
It is wisdom.
It says:
“I value this relationship more than my need to win.”
The world would become a healthier place if more people chose friendship over division and compassion over constant conflict.
One hundred years from now, most opinions will fade.
But how we treated people will remain part of our legacy.
So hold your beliefs with conviction — but wear them with humility.
And never let an opinion become more important than a person.

