Jump to content
  • entries
    2
  • comments
    4
  • views
    6,986

How to live like there's no tomorrow


How do you live life like there’s no tomorrow?

 

After watching the movie A Single Man yesterday, I had one question on my mind: How do you live like there’s no tomorrow? No matter what I thought, it didn't seem like the right answer. Or maybe it was right but only to a certain extent.

 

Like in this case: One day, you want to call your mom or a friend. But later you say, “Well, I’ll just call tomorrow.” If you want to live your life by this saying, then the correct thing to do would be to call your mom or friend that very day if not the minute you want to do it. Because something could happen that night, or even in the next few hours, which leaves the person you wanted to call dead. And for the rest of your life, you’d be regretting not calling them earlier or wondering how that last conversation would have went.

 

But in a different case, the answer isn’t so simple.

 

What about a job you want to do when you get older?

Or

Places you want to see?

Wishes you have for when you become an adult can’t fit into a 24-hour day.

 

What about goals?

Everyone tells you, you should have goals for the future. Something that keeps you going.

How can you have wishes and plans to accomplish goals in the future, when you’re trying to live as though tomorrow, you’ll be dead?

 

But then, this also leads to the subject of fear….

 

In the movie, the main character is an English Teacher. One day, in class, he talks to them about fear. Fear of growing old alone, getting killed, and death.

 

If you have a constant fear that there might not be a tomorrow, how do you live today? All your mind can think about is what’s going to happen. Will your house burn down while you’re sleeping? Will someone run a red light? Will the roads be really slick? Fear can keep you from living your life and as the saying goes; you can’t really die if you’ve never really lived.

 

I've heard people say you shouldn’t fear death because then how can you live.

I've also heard to live like there’s no tomorrow because tomorrow is never promised.

 

I guess the only way not to fear death is to accept it

 

I guess the only way to live for today is to

Say what you want to say

Do what you want to do

Don’t look back at the past

And don’t focus on the future.

 

It’s okay to have goals and things you want to do when you get older, but don’t get so caught up on the future that you forget what you have right now.

 

You have today.

  • Like 3

2 Comments


Recommended Comments

joann414

Posted

Well said.  I've learned from living to be my age that your goals change.  What started out as what you hoped to accomplish by a certain time can change, especially if you have children.  They come first.  You do what you feel you need to for and because of them.

 

Then, you've got to make sure your spouse or partner feels like he's still the other part of you that you nurture and care for along with yourself.  It's like my daddy always said.  He said it jokingly, but when you think about it, he's right.  "When your spouse stumps their toe, or hit their funny bone, it should hurt you too."  It took me a long time to grasp the meaning.  No matter how small the hurt, you share it.  The same as living your life like there's no tomorrow.

 

Share you loved one's pain.

Live your dreams through them if you can't have your own because of them.

Don't be selfish with your love.  It cost nothing to give it away, and there's always someone out there that needs it.  I promise you that.  When you give your love, in any capacity, you don't fret tomorrow.  You're living in your happiness, and the happiness you are giving others.

 

That's my outlook on live like there is no tomorrow.  If I could plan my future, and make it happen, I'd probably be bored and wondering why I wanted that so much.  A day at a time is much easier, I guarantee you.  JMO "Hops down off soapbox"

  • Like 2
old bob

Posted

I like your blog. Typical for somebody who has all her life in front of her.

 

Everybody fears death. It's part of the human nature. But what we fear is not the death itself, it's to be confronted with the sufferings and the pain of the crossing.

 

Fear of the unknown has always been the source of all religions. Having faith in life after death is a gift that is not given to all. I wish for you to have it once. If not, you will grow and be granted with more life experiences, as I did. You will certainly learn a lot from them, as all of us, old people, did.

 

At my age (soon 85), I have often been confronted with death, mine as well as those of others. It has almost become a friend, and the closer it is, the less I'm afraid.

 

‘memento mori’ , as said the old Romans.

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...