Home Page    About     Archive     Guest Book     Resources

What’s Waiting For You?

When you get up tomorrow morning, what will be waiting for you?  You may say ‘just another day, another dollar’. Or you may be thinking about that pile of work waiting for you that you didn’t finish yesterday.  Or maybe you are unemployed and you might respond – ‘Nothing!’

Are you looking forward to tomorrow?  Is it exciting because you don’t know what's going to happen.  Or is it scary because you don’t know what's going to happen?  Either way, it is going to happen. 

To think we are able, is almost to be so
 – to determine upon attainment is frequently attainment itself. 
-Samuel Smiles

Why are you afraid of tomorrow?  Examine those feelings and determine if they are real or just imagined, placed there by years of doubting or insecurity.  Most people are afraid of tomorrow simply because it is an unknown. Others are afraid because they are not prepared for an activity or assignment, better known as procrastination.  If you fear the unknown you are spending a lot of energy worrying about something that most likely will never occur.

Look upon your future as exciting and you can draw upon the energy of the cosmos, your subconscious mind, and all the other wonders of the universe.  Fear the future and you are placing it in danger or at least limiting the possibilities available to you.

A whole new attitude toward 
our problems will give us victory.
- Norman Vincent Peale

Do you know what you are capable of doing or producing?  If you think you are incapable of doing or achieving anymore than you already have, you have already started to die.  You may as well go ahead and make your final arrangements.

Your future is not in your hands, it is in your head!  Your attitude about your future is more important than you abilities.  Someone once said ‘if you don't like something, change it. If you can't change it, change the way you think about it!’

- Joe Freeman

Our destiny changes with our thought;
we shall become what we wish to become,
do what we wish to do,
when our habitual thought corresponds with our desire.
  Orison S. Marden

 

Home Page    About     Archive     Guest Book     Resource