The day after today is full of promise.
There is more rest, more time, and the increased ability to take action … tomorrow.
We don’t know an existence without tomorrow, so we start to depend on its proven ability to show up, even when we can’t.
Tomorrow is close enough to justify our procrastination, but too far away to impact our lives. Making it the power-play in the game of convenient perception– Guaranteed to win every time.
Breaking our dependence on tomorrow is difficult because we must first confront the pattern of inaction that tomorrow has created space for. And facing the accumulation of our tomorrow-weeks, tomorrow-months and tomorrow-years, is not a reality that can be easily absorbed today.
But, what if the promise of tomorrow is reflected back in today? And what if today, is our best opportunity for tomorrow?