Contentment in How Tomorrow Will Come Soon Enough

I’ve experienced many off-days in the past couple years with my vitamin deficiencies. And after struggling through a few weak miles, exhausted, I’ve learned to stop myself and say, “I’ll try again tomorrow.”

And after resting for that day, I would start over with the sunrise. Sometimes I would do better the next day.

And sometimes I’d do worse.

I learned to take it by the day. Take it by the day and realize that this one broken day couldn’t break me. Take it by the day and look forward to the better days to come.

The better days always came in their own time.

Striving for the milestones

I’ll never forget the first time I ran a mile without stopping. No, I didn’t run it in a fast timeโ€”It was more like a jog. But for a rising sixth-grader who had just started training, it felt like enough.

Now, jogging a mile feels like nothing. But back then, my heart swelled with joy at hitting the simple one-mile mark.

Until I decided that my time wasn’t fast enough. And one mile wasn’t enough.

I had to get faster, I had to get stronger, because in my mind, it just wasn’t enough.

And how often in this life do we rejoice in reaching one milestone, only to find ourselves dissatisfied again? How quickly do we obsess over the next mark to hit, instead of celebrating how far we’ve come?

There’s a certain rhythm of thought that corrupts my mindset.

I have to break this time because all the fast runners can.

Because I haven’t improved in forever.

Because I need to qualify for State.

It’s the next milestone, it’s what I’m supposed to do, it’s just how life works…

So often I get too far ahead of myself. There’s nothing wrong with having these goals, but taking them too far causes me to put an extra pressure on myself.

Suddenly, those goals become the security of my identity.

Have you ever felt that?

It makes me realize how valuable it is to place our identity in Christ and not in reaching the milestones. When you find fulfillment in Him, you can more easily accept where you are, even when you’re not in your season to bloom.

It’s the truth behind contentment that Paul describes in Philippians 4.

“I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound.”

~Philippians 4:11-12, ESV

Contentment refers to not just what you have, but where you are.

And you belong where you are right now, my reader. Just breathe in the fresh air and look at the milestone standing beside you now. There is a milestone here. Maybe it doesn’t stand as tall beside the road, maybe it’s hidden in the shadows…

But it’s there.

It’s there, even if it’s as small as carrying on for another day. Taking another breath. Trusting in your Savior for another step.

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

~Phillipians 4:13, NKJV

Philippians 4:13 is one of those Bible verses easily taken out of context. Essentially, it refers to how Christ will give us the strength, and fulfillment, to have contentment.

With the strength of Christ, you can accept where you are.

You can accept the off-days. Those days when you know that you should have more physical strength. Strength that you can’t seem to muster from under the weight of your hurting legs.

But you can accept those days. You may not find inside your physical body the strength to finish your goalโ€”many times I haven’tโ€”but that’s okay.

You don’t always have to finish, and that’s okay.

Because you’re accepting where you areโ€”and sometimes, you’re in an off-day. Sometimes, you’re in an off-season.

For the past two springs in track, I’ve had an off-season. And coming off a winter in which I put so much effort into the hope of succeeding, I had a hard time accepting my season.

And I had a hard time accepting myself.

As I’ve struggled to find contentment, I hope that God will help it grow in my heart a little more each day.

Contentment will help you to see the beauty in the broken days. It will remind you that as you wait for the sunrise, you can still look up at the stars.

contentment will help you see the beauty in the broken days

When you aren’t changing the world

Many times, I’ve found myself thinking that, when I get to some next stage, my life will “finally start.”

When I reach this milestone, I’ll be satisfied.

When this year ends, it’ll all get better.

And when tomorrow comes, I’llโ€”

And then it suddenly hit me: My life has already started.

So why was I always waiting there, as if I would wake up one day with my life “all together”, ready to face the world?

My life has already started, and I’m not “changing the world” today. Today isn’t that time. Maybe tomorrow, maybe someday, I will stir a thousand hearts.

But today, I can (as Mother Teresa put it), “do small things with great love.” I can find purpose in the simple things, and accept my current place.

It reminds me of something that I’ve told myself at practice lately:

Today isn’t the day you try to qualify for State. That day will come soon enough.

Maybe in a few months, maybe someday, you’ll make it… but not today.

And that’s okay.

Maybe I’ll make State one day. Maybe I won’t.

And maybe I’ll “change the world” one day, but maybe I won’t.

Does it really matter?

Because perhaps… perhaps giving one weary heart the courage to keep beating means just as much as stirring a thousand hearts for Christ.

If we choose to live a life for Christ, we’ll make an impact for Him.

And we can find contentment in that.

Trusting God with our tomorrows

Tomorrow doesn’t always look like what we would hope or expect.

And yet, even on the broken days we come back having learned something, having grown a little stronger. Even if it’s learning how give yourself the grace to rest and say “I’ll try again tomorrow.”

I used to see those words as a sign of weakness. I would work myself to the bone to cope with my fear of tomorrow’s potential failure. Essentially, I tried to control tomorrow’s outcome by training hard.

God showed me the freedom that comes with laying tomorrow in His hands.

“Yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes.”

~James 4:14, ESV

Tomorrow could be worse, but I treasure the possibility that it could also be better.

And as Christians, we can live in the hope that tomorrow will always come.

Seeing yourself where you are

Sometimes on the broken days we have to lift our heads and say, “I’ll try again tomorrow.”

Sometimes we have to stop in the middle of the road and let ourselves catch our breath. And let ourselves come inside for the fuel of a nice meal, for warming by the fireplace, for seeking shelter in the storm.

For enjoying life and finally accepting where we are (Eccl. 3:12).

For seeing ourselves where we are today, because tomorrow will come soon enough.

And tomorrow will be made beautiful in its time, as will today (Eccl. 3:11).

But the cold, dark night and the waiting for the sunriseโ€”

It can take longer than just a night. Waiting for tomorrow can mean waiting for more than a day.

The rising of the sun over the mountaintop and the peeking of the light through the cloudsโ€”

That next stage of life, tomorrowโ€”

It’ll all come someday, I promise.

But for now, I want you to see yourself where you are. Here in the waiting. The resting. The growing.

You’re in a beautiful process, and somewhere in your heart, you have the strength to smile at your Savior and say, “I know that You’ll carry me to tomorrow.”

37 thoughts on “Contentment in How Tomorrow Will Come Soon Enough

  1. Amazing work! Again I am encouraged by your words of wisdomโ€ฆplease keep this up it is always great to read.

  2. Love this post, Alannah! I resonate with your words about running. I just started cross country and I am MUCH slower than most of the people on the team, but just in a few practices, I’ve already improved! But I catch myself saying, “Oh, I’m not good enough because I’m so much slower than they are,” instead of just taking a moment to say, “Wow, how awesome is it that I actually can run? And how cool is it that I’ve already gotten so much faster?” Anyway — a great post to read right before I head off to practice. ๐Ÿ™‚

  3. Alannah, this is an amazing post! You are a very gifted writer and the Lord is using you in amazing! Super encouraging and exactly what I needed to hear, especially since I start xc on Tuesday!

  4. Thanks for this post, Alannah! It’s a good reminder for me, especially when I struggle not only with comparing myself to other runners, but how fast I used to be compared to where I am now. This is a huge green-light thought as I’m buckling up for my first race of the season tomorrow. Thanks again!

    1. You’re welcome, Faith! Comparison is a really hard place to be, so I’m praying for you, especially as you have that race tomorrow! My first race of the season happens to be tomorrow too (:

  5. Thank you for another wonderful blog post Alannah! Contentment is a rather hard lesson God has been teaching me. Ever since I got a job, itโ€™s been so much harder to find time and energy for writing or anything else. But now Iโ€™m learning to settle for getting just one thing done each day. Your words encouraged me to keep going with this method. ๐Ÿ™‚

  6. This is so encouraging, Alannah! I needed that reminder right now–it can be so hard to be content with the stage of life we’re in, while staying faithful in the little things we do ๐Ÿ™‚

  7. This was so encouraging to me! I’m definitely in an off-season, and today has been rough, but this brought me some peace ๐Ÿ™‚

  8. This post was exactly what I needed. I’ve been struggling with comparing myself with other runners on my team, but contentment with where I am and what I can do is what I need. Thank you!

  9. I can SO relate to the whole idea of always trying to improve, always reaching for the next milestone. It can be exhausting. Thank you so much for your encouragement, Alannah! This helps.

  10. I love this post! Thank you for sharing!
    Also, I’ve tried to like your posts but I can’t figure out how to. It’s probably my problem. I just wanted to let you know that I love all your posts even if I can’t figure out how to like them. ๐Ÿ˜‰๐Ÿ˜Š

    1. Aww thanks so much, Lizzie!
      Also, the only way to like posts on my site (since it’s now wp.org) is through the WordPress.com Reader. But I’m so glad that you like them! (:

  11. This is so helpful to me! And SO accurate with where I am right now. I often find myself being discontent with where Iโ€™m at, instead of being grateful for what Iโ€™ve been blessed with!
    As a senior itโ€™s especially hard because I feel like this is my last chance to break 20, win state, have a competitive girlโ€™s team like last year, and yet I feel like itโ€™s so far away.. Iโ€™ve been blessed with the opportunity to run XC as a homeschooler, which is something a lot of people canโ€™t do, Iโ€™ve been able to stay injury-free, and Iโ€™m almost exactly the same speed as my best friend! And yet I want more. Please be praying for me! And thank you for the article ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Thanks for sharing that, Kezi! And I’m so glad that my article helped you. I’ll definitely be praying about your senior year and XC (you’ve got this!) ๐Ÿ’™

  12. Thank you so much ๐Ÿฅน
    Can’t believe this blog crossed my path…it’s such a blessing <3
    Keep writing and running this race for the One Who is cheering us on!

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