It's kind of a funny tradition when you think about it, isn't it? How we all stay up late each year and count down the final seconds of the year together?
5…4…3…2…1…
Happy New Year!
We cheer, we celebrate. It's a big show and a lot of fun, but how many of us—in a rush for a kiss from a loved one or as the glasses clink together—really feel what's just happened.
Those seconds we were counting down were seconds we'll never get back, our time here tick, tick, ticking away. A year of our lives gone forever. Tempus fugit. Memento mori.
The Stoics didn't take note of how fast time flies and the shortness of life to be morbid. They sought invigoration. They sought perspective. They sought clarity.
Seneca said that if you went to bed thinking that you had lived your whole life, the morning would feel like a bonus. We can apply the same thinking annually.
2024 is dead and gone. Who we were in 2024 is dead and gone. Here we are, lucky enough to rise again in 2025. A year not guaranteed to anyone. We have beaten death. We have been given a fresh chance at life. So who will we be?
Will this be the year you fully realize the gift of time and become the person you know you're capable of being? To act upon those dreams you have? To not waste a moment, knowing it's not promised to anyone?
Thousands of people from all over the world have already taken the first step toward self-improvement and making sure this will be a year they experience life to its fullest by joining our Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge.
We've already begun 21 days of Stoic-inspired challenges designed to help us make big changes, stop procrastinating, develop resilience and start becoming the best version of ourselves.
And just like has happened every year for the past seven years tons of people woke up and emailed us today, January 1st, to ask "Is it too late? Can you still let me in?"
You will still receive all of the content and be able to participate in the live Q&As and all the other great stuff we're doing. Time is running out, but you can still catch up.
Do not wait any longer to demand more of your life and yourself. No more, "I'll start tomorrow." No more, "In the future, I'll do better and expect better." No more "Next year I'll…"
No comments:
Post a Comment