"If life were predictable it would cease to be life, and be without flavor"
About this Quote
The line works because it’s doing two things at once. On the surface, it’s consoling: uncertainty isn’t a flaw in the system, it is the system. Underneath, it’s a quiet rebuke to the fantasy of control, a fantasy that tends to flourish in periods of crisis. Roosevelt lived through depression, world war, and a marriage that forced her into reinvention. For a public figure expected to perform poise and continuity, she became unusually fluent in contingency. Her authority wasn’t built on promising stability; it was built on modeling endurance amid instability.
“Flavor” is the rhetorical masterstroke. It drags philosophy down to the tongue. Instead of preaching stoicism, she suggests curiosity. Uncertainty becomes not just survivable but enlivening, the spice that keeps experience from turning into mere routine. That’s politically savvy, too: a democratic culture needs citizens who can tolerate change without panicking, who can hold the tension between hope and ambiguity.
As a First Lady who expanded the role into advocacy and public conscience, Roosevelt isn’t romanticizing chaos. She’s legitimizing the unpredictability that people already live with, and turning it into a reason to stay awake to the world rather than retreat from it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Live in the Moment |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Tomorrow Is Now (Eleanor Roosevelt, 1963)
Evidence: There never has been security. No man has ever known what he would meet around the next corner; if life were predictable it would cease to be life, and be without flavor. (Page 80). Primary-source attribution points to Eleanor Roosevelt’s posthumously published book 'Tomorrow Is Now' (Harper & Row, 1963). The line most often circulated as a standalone sentence ("If life were predictable...") appears in the book as part of the longer sentence above, commonly cited as p. 80. I could verify the book’s bibliographic publication data (1963, Harper & Row, 1st ed.) via an Open Library/Internet Archive MARC record, but I did not locate a fully viewable scan in the sources I accessed to independently confirm the page image for p. 80; the p. 80 detail is widely reported but should be checked against a physical/digital copy to reach 'high' confidence on the exact page. Open Library lists the 1963 Harper & Row edition and its catalog data. ([openlibrary.org](https://openlibrary.org/works/OL1624826W/Tomorrow_is_now)) Other candidates (1) The Pillars of Life (Matthew Mendenhall, Tamrah Mendenhall, 2023) compilation95.0% ... IF LIFE WERE PREDICTABLE IT WOULD CEASE TO BE LIFE , AND BE WITHOUT FLAVOR . ” ~ ELEANOR ROOSEVELT “LIFE IS NOT A... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Roosevelt, Eleanor. (2026, February 8). If life were predictable it would cease to be life, and be without flavor. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-life-were-predictable-it-would-cease-to-be-19276/
Chicago Style
Roosevelt, Eleanor. "If life were predictable it would cease to be life, and be without flavor." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-life-were-predictable-it-would-cease-to-be-19276/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If life were predictable it would cease to be life, and be without flavor." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-life-were-predictable-it-would-cease-to-be-19276/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.







