Remember the past, plan for the future, but live for today, because yesterday is gone and tomorrow may never c... — Luke the Evangelist
Remember the past, plan for the future, but live for today, because yesterday is gone and tomorrow may never come.
Author: Luke the Evangelist
Insight: We spend so much of our mental energy time-traveling. You might be sitting at dinner replaying an awkward conversation from last week, or lying in bed worrying about a meeting next month. This advice isn't about ignoring responsibilities or pretending consequences don't exist. It is about recognizing where your actual power lies. Yesterday is a memory you can learn from, and tomorrow is a destination you can prepare for, but neither exists in a way you can touch or change right now. The surprising truth is that living for today actually makes you better at planning for tomorrow. When you stop treating the present moment as just a stepping stone to somewhere else, you become more grounded and less anxious. You can't build a solid future if you are sleepwalking through the only day you actually possess. Think of the past as data and the future as a direction, but keep your hands in the present. That is the only place where work gets done, love gets shared, and life actually happens.