I choose to make the rest of my life the best of my life.
The real genius here lies in the word *choose*—Louise Hay isn't suggesting the rest of your life will magically become better, but rather that improvement demands a deliberate break from how you've been living. Most people regret the past while hoping the future improves, suspended between two timeframes; Hay insists you're the agent, not the circumstance. When someone leaves a difficult job at forty-five and actually commits to rebuilding their days differently—rising earlier, setting boundaries, reading again—they're practicing this philosophy: the identical remaining years become unrecognizable simply because the decisions change. That's the uncomfortable precision of her statement.
“The only person you are destined to become is the person you decide to be.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson“We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achie...”
Maya Angelou“The wound is the place where the light enters you.”
Rumi“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”
Lao Tzu