“Today is the only important day. There are 86,400 seconds in a day, and how you use those are critical.”
As someone who’s training to run a marathon next June, I’m constantly bookmarking inspirational quotes and videos I find online. The above quote is from a video collage posted by a fitness Facebook page, that is six minutes of pure motivation.
My interpretation of this quote is that today is the only day you have control over. Today should command your full attention and requires all of your effort and energy.
Yesterday is done and gone. You cannot change what you did yesterday, whether it was good choices or bad ones that you made. If you did well, then use it as momentum to help you do well again today. If you made poor choices, use them as motivation to make today different.
This is especially important for financial choices and spending habits.
Focus On Today
Use your focus for today to achieve your big financial goals. Tomorrow is a new day that you can’t control until it gets here. You don’t know what forks you’ll encounter or what decisions you’ll need to make. You cannot contemplate decisions for choices that have not yet presented themselves.
So instead of focusing on what you cannot change yesterday and obsessing about what you have to do tomorrow, focus on today. It’s the only day you have control over. Today is the most important day.
In my training for a marathon, I need to ensure that I’m giving my body the right fuel for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. I am following my training program exactly and getting a good night’s sleep. Yesterday is gone, so now I have to concentrate on tomorrow when it comes. My goal is to make the right decisions today – it’s a small but important step.
3 Ways to Make the Right Decisions
When I was working to pay off $109,000 of credit card debt, I had to ensure that my wife and I followed our budget process together. We reviewed our finances and updated our spending plan daily. It was our goal to spend only what we had in the budget. You cannot undo the choices you made yesterday.
Here are three ways to ensure you make the right decisions today.
- Make the small wins count. Small steps are just as important (if not more so) than the big steps, so take time to acknowledge your wins and celebrate them. Even something like using a coupon at the grocery store or negotiating a lower cable bill are steps that deserve to be rewarded.
- Check in with an accountability partner. Find someone who is in a similar situation as you and partner up together. Check in with them if you’re having a rough day or feel the need to overspend. They can help encourage and motivate you to stay the course.
- Put reminders in place. It’s easy to forget why we’re trying to make the right financial decisions, so put a sticky note on your fridge or hang a picture in your office. Put reminders in places where they will trigger your motivation to make the right choice.
To be successful you need to have more days where you make the right decisions than the days where you make the wrong ones. Don’t let a bad decision from yesterday, or last week, keep you from working hard to make the right decisions today! As the good days outnumber the bad, you’ll still be getting closer and closer to your goal.
Whether you’re training for a marathon, trying to pay off credit card debt, or changing your spending habits, remember this – today is the most important day.
What’s one thing you do each day to make better decisions? How do you stop stressing over situations you can’t control?