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January 2020_Digital Issue

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He paused for a moment, and said,

“You’re all wrong. The most valuable

land in the world is the graveyard. In the

graveyard are buried all of the unwritten

novels, never-launched businesses,

unreconciled relationships, and all of

the other things that people thought,

‘I’ll get around to that tomorrow.’ One

day, however, their tomorrow ran out.”

Todd reminds us to not die full of our

best work, that we must empty

ourselves by doing those everything

creative or wonderful we always wanted

to do with our lives. He writes

beautifully:

How much work did you do today that

you will be proud of tomorrow? I don’t

mean just how you handled the big

things, but also how you addressed the

little, seemingly insignificant ones. Did

you make progress on what matters

most to you, or did you allow the buzz,

busyness, and expectations of others to

squelch your passion and focus?

Every day, when we put our tired heads

on the pillow to slip into the world of

sleep and dreams, if we could take a

moment and reflect back on the day

gone by and ask ourselves, “How much

work did I do today that I will be proud

of tomorrow?” chances are, our actions

tomorrow will look very different. This

simple question will make you pause

and understand how you used your

time today. Whether it’s a new habit you

wish to form or an old one you want to

drop, no matter you want to keep your

new year resolutions or be more

productive with your time, here are

three key points to remember:

Enthusiasm over optimism

Try not to bite more than you can chew.

Even with the biggest mouth, no one

has more than thirty-two teeth if you

see what I mean. There are only 24

hours in a day. It is important to be

reasonable with your expectations you

set for yourself. This is one of the most

common mistakes we make when

working on self-transformation: setting

unrealistic expectations out of wild

optimism.

Optimism pays but being insanely

optimistic is often a recipe for disaster.

For, when we are unreasonably hopeful,

we tend to focus more on how things

may turn out (the outcome) and not

how we must shape them (our actions).

Enthusiasm is necessary, it keeps you

focused on the action, it helps you

Jan. 2020 www.yogicherald.com 31

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