31. The Danger of “Someday”
A reflection on the subtle trap of postponing life — and how the promise of “someday” quietly robs the only moment that truly exists: now.
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The Danger of “Someday”
> "We are always getting ready to live, but never living." — Alan Watts
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The Promise of Later
“Someday” sounds harmless.
Soft. Reasonable. Responsible.
Someday I’ll rest.
Someday I’ll start.
Someday I’ll enjoy my life.
It feels wise to postpone joy until conditions improve.
But “someday” is a horizon — it moves as you move.
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Life on Hold
Most people don’t postpone living because they are lazy.
They postpone it because they are serious.
They want to get everything right first.
Stability. Success. Certainty.
But life doesn’t wait until you are ready.
It’s happening while you prepare for it.
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The Subtle Theft
“Someday” steals quietly.
It doesn’t shout or demand.
It just suggests that now is not quite enough.
Not ready enough.
Not successful enough.
Not safe enough.
And so you trade real moments for imagined futures.
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The Myth of Perfect Timing
There is no perfect time.
There is only this time.
The conversation you’re half listening to.
The meal you’re rushing through.
The evening you plan to “really enjoy” once you finish everything else.
But everything else never finishes.
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A Different Choice
What if nothing is missing right now?
What if this unfinished, imperfect moment is not a rehearsal — but the performance?
When you drop “someday,” something shifts.
Not dramatically. Quietly.
You stop waiting for your life to begin.
And notice that it already did.
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> "The danger of someday is not that it never comes —
but that it convinces you this moment isn’t enough."