What if, before your feet even hit the floor, you whispered to yourself:
“This might be the last sunrise I get. How do I want to live today?”
Not in a frantic, bucket-list, “redo my entire life before bedtime” way.
In a quiet, grounded, deeply intentional way.
What if that single thought rearranged things?
What if it softened the edges of all the places you rush?
What if it sharpened your focus on what and who truly matters?
What if it nudged you, gently and lovingly, back to yourself?
Let’s go there.
Here is the uncomfortable truth.
Most of us believe we know what matters until life cracks us open.
A diagnosis.
A loss.
A caregiving season that humbles us.
A moment when someone we love needs us in a way that changes everything.
Those are the moments when clarity arrives without an invitation.
You suddenly know what is noise and what is sacred.
You know who brings you peace and who drains your spirit.
You know what brings you alive and what steals your joy.
But what if we did not wait for the crisis?
What if we asked ourselves, right here on a perfectly ordinary morning:
“What would the future version of me, the one near the end of life, wish I had spent more time on today?”
The answers are usually simple.
The things that matter most do not shout.
They whisper softly and consistently, and we miss them because we are too busy proving, pleasing, and performing.
Imagine waking up and living the next 24 hours with the awareness that nothing is guaranteed.
How would you move differently?
The smell of your coffee.
The softness of a dog curled at your feet.
The way the light hits the kitchen counter.
The familiar voice on the other end of the phone.
Suddenly, all of it would feel like a gift.
Petty arguments.
Guilt you have carried for years.
Over-explaining.
Over-functioning.
Trying to be everything to everyone.
Some things are heavy simply because they are not yours to carry anymore.
“I love you.”
“I am sorry.”
“I forgive you.”
“I miss you.”
“I am proud of you.”
You would not wait for the perfect moment.
You would create one.
Use the good blanket.
Book the trip.
Wear the perfume.
Say yes to the thing that excites you.
Say no to the thing that drains you.
Joy is not frivolous.
It is fuel.
You would stop shrinking.
Stop dimming.
Stop telling yourself “later” about the things you know you want.
Fear can be loud, but your truth is louder.
We get busy.
We get stuck in old roles.
We tell ourselves we will get to our life once everyone else is taken care of.
But here is the invitation.
You do not have to wait for a wake-up call to start living like your life is your own.
You can choose differently today.
Quietly.
Tenderly.
Then again tomorrow.
Tomorrow morning, try this.
Before you reach for your phone, sit for ten seconds and ask yourself:
That is it.
One honest question.
One tiny, meaningful action.
Tiny actions become habits.
Habits become a way of being.
A way of living awake.
When you live with intentionality, you stop wasting time.
You start paying attention.
You honor the life you are in instead of postponing it for some mythical “someday.”
So tomorrow morning, whisper it again:
“If this were my last day, how would I live?”
Then do one thing differently.
One thing that makes your day feel like it truly belongs to you.