"While living I want to live well"
About this Quote
A man branded an enemy by the U.S. and later exhibited as a spectacle doesn’t talk about “living well” as a soft lifestyle goal. In Geronimo’s mouth, the line lands like a refusal: if life is going to be taken, confined, paraded, or bargained over, it won’t be reduced to mere survival on someone else’s terms.
The economy of the sentence is the point. “While living” draws a hard boundary around the present tense, acknowledging impermanence without begging for pity. It’s the language of someone who knows death isn’t abstract; it’s a policy outcome, an operational risk, a frequent visitor. Then comes “I want,” blunt and personal, an insistence on agency from a man repeatedly stripped of it. He doesn’t appeal to rights granted by a state; he asserts desire as a kind of sovereignty.
“Live well” is deliberately unspecific, which makes it sharper. It’s not a checklist of comforts; it’s dignity, self-direction, and a life measured by one’s own standards. For an Apache leader navigating warfare, displacement, and captivity, “well” carries the weight of cultural continuity: family, land, ceremony, honor, and the ability to choose one’s movements and allegiances.
The subtext is a critique of the colonial bargain: exist quietly and be grateful. Geronimo’s line rejects that bargain. It also sidesteps romantic martyrdom. He’s not chasing a glorious end; he’s demanding a decent life now, a demand that reads as both intimate and political, because for him the personal was never separable from power.
The economy of the sentence is the point. “While living” draws a hard boundary around the present tense, acknowledging impermanence without begging for pity. It’s the language of someone who knows death isn’t abstract; it’s a policy outcome, an operational risk, a frequent visitor. Then comes “I want,” blunt and personal, an insistence on agency from a man repeatedly stripped of it. He doesn’t appeal to rights granted by a state; he asserts desire as a kind of sovereignty.
“Live well” is deliberately unspecific, which makes it sharper. It’s not a checklist of comforts; it’s dignity, self-direction, and a life measured by one’s own standards. For an Apache leader navigating warfare, displacement, and captivity, “well” carries the weight of cultural continuity: family, land, ceremony, honor, and the ability to choose one’s movements and allegiances.
The subtext is a critique of the colonial bargain: exist quietly and be grateful. Geronimo’s line rejects that bargain. It also sidesteps romantic martyrdom. He’s not chasing a glorious end; he’s demanding a decent life now, a demand that reads as both intimate and political, because for him the personal was never separable from power.
Quote Details
| Topic | Live in the Moment |
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