The story...
I loved the idea of the Olympic Games and often imagined competing in my favorite event(s) - decathlon, downhill skiing, biathlon... I'd be the victorious one who worked hard to overcome all problems and shortcomings to be the best. "It would be soo... great to win."
It pained me to think that the wait was four years between events. I do wonder whether the reality of the games was as good as I hoped it would be. Certainly, I never actually went to the games and the TV coverage was much more limited then. Was I living in that imaginary world trying to fulfill needs of mine? I sure enjoyed following: Mark Spitz, Bruce Jenner, Edwin Moses, Eric Heiden, Usain Bolt, Bode Miller, Katie Ledecky...
Pride in my Country and hopes that I too might win in the game of life seemed like positive traits. Did they compel me to want to be a better man? Even if I couldn't actually win, I could live more often in an imaginary world where I might. Was I spending too much of my thought life in an imagined future versus living out the actual day(s) that were mine?
I expect that the only church in town would preach the Good News of how we can live out this life, and the one to follow, walking humbly and close with God. Imagining the future and reflecting on the past are helpful yet they surely are less important than living out the reality of today. Today is where we both can live out each breath of this miracle of life and be in the present where God is.
Just for today...
"I'd get so caught up in what I was going to do that I often wasn't aware of what I was doing now . . . I give thanks for the little joys in each day. I still make plans, but I don't let my thoughts erase the present. Anticipation is sweet, but not at the cost of today." Hope for Today (p. 249)
"The true nature of my problems was my stubborn refusal to acknowledge feelings, to accept them, and to let them go. I have very little power over what feelings arise, but what I choose to do about them is my responsibility. Today I can accept my feelings, share about them with others, recognize they are feelings, not facts, and let them go." Courage to Change (p. 249)
"Our greatest handicap is self-deception. We cannot recognize in ourselves the faults we criticize in others." One Day at a Time (p. 249)