TLDR: In this excerpt from "Being in the Way Podcast," Alan Watts articulates a critical distinction between mere survival and genuine living. The core insight is that most people operate in survival mode—mechanically moving through existence—while the possibility of true living requires a shift in consciousness toward presence, awareness, and engagement with the immediate moment. Watts emphasizes that this isn't about achieving external success, but about transforming how we relate to our existence itself.
What Is the Difference Between Surviving and Living?
Alan Watts draws a sharp line between two modes of human existence that often go unexamined. Survival is the default state for most people: going through the motions, checking off tasks, managing obligations, and treating life as something to get through. It is reactive rather than creative, mechanical rather than conscious. In survival mode, we are essentially asleep to our own experience.
Living, by contrast, is a state of engagement with the present moment. It involves awareness, choice, and a quality of presence that transforms even ordinary activities into expressions of consciousness. Watts suggests that most cultures, educational systems, and social structures condition us toward survival—toward productivity, security, and the postponement of joy—rather than toward genuine living.
The distinction matters because it affects not only how we feel about our lives but how we actually experience time, relationships, and our own bodies. Someone in survival mode experiences life as something happening to them; someone truly living experiences themselves as the life that is happening.
How Does Presence Transform Survival Into Living?
Watts emphasizes that the gateway between these two states is presence—a quality of attention and awareness in the here and now. Presence is not a luxury or spiritual indulgence; it is the fundamental difference between being numb to existence and being awake to it.
When we are present, we notice things that survival mode obscures: the texture of a moment, the quality of an interaction, the aliveness of our own body and senses. A person can eat the same meal in two completely different ways—mechanically, while thinking about the next task, or with full sensory and emotional presence. The second person is living; the first is surviving.
This presence is cultivated not through striving but through a shift in attention. Watts would likely point out that we already know how to be present—children are naturally present until they are trained out of it—so the practice is largely one of unlearning the habitual patterns that keep us locked in survival consciousness.
Why Do Cultural Systems Push Us Toward Survival Rather Than Living?
Watts often critiques the underlying assumptions of Western culture, and this distinction reveals why. Our economic, educational, and social systems are largely organized around scarcity, future security, and deferred gratification. We are taught to sacrifice the present for the future: go to school now to get a job later, work hard now to retire later, delay pleasure now to achieve success later.
This future-oriented thinking makes people treat life as a means to an end rather than as an end in itself. We become servants of our own ambitions, always working toward a state we never quite reach. The irony, as Watts points out, is that this approach never actually delivers the promised satisfaction—we simply move the finish line further away.
Schools and workplaces reward obedience, punctuality, and delayed gratification—all survival values—rather than creativity, presence, and genuine engagement. This conditions us from childhood to believe that our worth depends on future achievement, not on our present being.
What Does Living Require From Us?
Living, in Watts' view, does not require changing your external circumstances. A person can live while working a job, raising a family, or managing responsibilities. What it requires is a change in consciousness—a reversal of the usual relationship between effort and reward.
Rather than treating life as a destination to arrive at, living means recognizing that you are already here, in this moment, which is the only moment you ever have. The paradox Watts explores is that when you truly accept this—when you stop fighting against the present moment—you become more capable, creative, and effective in your actions.
Living also requires permission—permission to enjoy simple things without guilt, to be present without constantly optimizing, to acknowledge that the point of life is life itself, not some external achievement. In a culture built on the assumption that you must earn the right to be happy, this permission can feel revolutionary.
How Does This Relate to Spiritual Practice?
For Watts, the distinction between surviving and living is not separate from spiritual practice; it is spiritual practice. Meditation, presence work, and contemplative traditions exist to undo the conditioning that locks us into survival consciousness and return us to an awakened relationship with existence.
The Buddha's First Noble Truth—that ordinary existence involves suffering or unsatisfactoriness—is not pessimism; it is clarity about what happens when we remain in survival mode, chasing security and avoiding discomfort. The path out is not to change circumstances but to change our fundamental relationship to them through presence and awareness.
Watts suggests that spiritual awakening is really just waking up to the life you are already living, rather than perpetually postponing your existence in service to an imagined future self.
Where to Go From Here
The immediate practice following this insight is simple: notice, right now, whether you are surviving or living. Are you fully present, or are you moving through this moment as a means to another moment? What would it feel like to treat this task, this conversation, this breath as worthy of full attention?
Explore Watts' full conversation on Being in the Way Podcast Ep. 35: "Dreaming the World" for a deeper dive into his philosophy. Consider experimenting with presence in one small area of daily life—eating, walking, or working—and notice what shifts when you bring full awareness to something you usually do on autopilot. Many spiritual traditions, from Zen to Advaita to Dzogchen, offer specific techniques for cultivating this presence. The thread running through all of them is the same: reclaiming your aliveness in the present moment is the gate between mere survival and genuine living.



