After turning forty, I noticed something had changed in me. Things I used to remember easily, I now keep forgetting.
My wife jokes with me, saying, "You're not old yet, but your memory is getting old first."
Actually, forget about fortyβI was already forgetting things when I was twenty-five.
I wanted to celebrate our wedding anniversary, but ended up working overtime and traveling, so we just rushed through it;
I wanted to hold stocks for long-term investment, but sold them after just over a year, missing out on a tenfold return;
I wanted to run a marathon, but kept putting off the training plan,
and by the time I remembered, there were only ten days left until the race.
Time, what a sneaky friend it is.
It doesn't remind you, doesn't rush you,
but it silently makes you pay the price.
π¦ That Future Day is Actually a "Lighthouse"
I figured it out laterβit wasn't that my memory was bad, it was that "the future" felt too far away from me.
If a goal is too vague, people easily set it aside.
But "a day in the future"β
it's actually like a lighthouse, keeping us from getting lost in the sea of daily life.
β³ Calendars Remind Us of "Today," But Who Reminds Us of "That Day"?
Calendars remind us what date it is today;
watches remind us what time it is now;
but what we're missing is a tool that reminds us of "a future day."
That's what DaysFromToday does.
It helps you count days, set goals, and look toward the future.
It's not one of those ticking countdown timers,
but a quiet navigator,
letting you know where you're heading on your journey through time.
π I've Set My 100-Day Wish, What About You?
I now have a "100-day countdown."
On that day, I want to achieve a new goal.
Every day when I see it, I remind myself:
I need to take one more step today, otherwise that day will never come.
What about you?
Do you have a future worth counting down to?
Created by the Days From Today team