the Daily Quote - Positive Daily Inspiration and Motivational Quote of the Day

Joel Osteen - "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you"

7 min · 6. juni 2026
episode Joel Osteen - "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you" cover

Beskrivelse

Welcome to the Daily Quote [https://greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast [https://greatnewspodcast.com/podcast]. Listen today... because good news should be heard and the link is right here in the show notes. Today's quote of the day comes form Joel Osteen.He has written several best-selling books, including Your Best Life Now [https://amzn.to/3RUWOcE] and Think Better, Live Better [https://amzn.to/3QrdkRc]. Today's quote is both simple and powerful.Joel Osteen once said: "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you" Osteen uses a car metaphor to explain the importance of the future. When you drive, you have a large windshield in front of you and a small rear-view mirror. And that proportion is deliberate. The windshield is large and the mirror is small because what's in front of you is far more important than what's behind you. Think about what happens when that proportion gets reversed. When the mirror gets bigger than the windshield. When the past takes up more of your attention than the road ahead. You drift. You miss what's coming. You become so focused on what already happened: the mistake, the loss, the version of yourself that no longer exists, that you stop seeing what's directly in front of you, available right now, waiting to be engaged with. This doesn't mean the past doesn't matter. It means it already happened. The life in front of you is the only one still in motion. The only one where your choices register. The only one where today's decision can change tomorrow's direction. That's where your attention belongs. Through the windshield. On what's coming. On what's possible. On the road that is still, right now, entirely open. Tony Robbins [https://greatnewspodcast.com/tag/tony-robbins/] famously said, "the past does not equal the future". [https://greatnewspodcast.com/tony-robbins-the-past-does-not-equal-the-future/] What matters most is where you choose to go next.Growth happens when you stop replaying old chapters and start writing new ones.Your mistakes, setbacks, and disappointments do not get the final word. Your next decision does. Your next habit does. Your next step does. So instead of living in what was, focus on what can be. The future is still open, and that is where your power lives. In a previous episode of the Daily Quote we covered Dr. Benjamin Hardy [https://greatnewspodcast.com/buddha-do-not-dwell-in-the-past-do-not-dream-of-the-future-concentrate-the-mind-on-the-present-moment/]'s concept that the future determines your present and the present determines the past. This concept, at first exposure seems backwards. How is it possible that the future shapes your present. How can the present change your past? We don't have time machines yet. Right? Well Dr. Benjamin Hardy's point is that the past does shape the present because in the present we can choose what the past means. The tragedy, suffering, abuse, failures of the past can crush you and hold you down or they can propel you forward. Depending on what meaning you assign them in the present. You can't change the past but you can change what the past means to you. And the future shapes your present because if you expect more of the same in the future it isn't very compelling. It doesn't motivate you to take action. But if you envision a compelling future. One that excites you and inspires you and one you truly want then you will be motivated to do the things you need to do today to get there. In this way, the future determines your present. So dream big and imagine a compelling future that will give you the juice to do the needed work today so you will live that compelling dream in your future. So here's the question: What aspect of your past is holding you back that maybe assigning a new meaning to it would transform how you think about your life today? And what compelling future can you imagine that will give you the energy to actually make it a reality? Are you looking through the windshield or the rearview mirror? That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now but I'll back tomorrow. Same pod time, same pod station with another Daily Quote.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av the Daily Quote - Positive Daily Inspiration and Motivational Quote of the Day sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

830 Episoder

episode Joel Osteen - "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you" cover

Joel Osteen - "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you"

Welcome to the Daily Quote [https://greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast [https://greatnewspodcast.com/podcast]. Listen today... because good news should be heard and the link is right here in the show notes. Today's quote of the day comes form Joel Osteen.He has written several best-selling books, including Your Best Life Now [https://amzn.to/3RUWOcE] and Think Better, Live Better [https://amzn.to/3QrdkRc]. Today's quote is both simple and powerful.Joel Osteen once said: "The life in front of you is more important than the life behind you" Osteen uses a car metaphor to explain the importance of the future. When you drive, you have a large windshield in front of you and a small rear-view mirror. And that proportion is deliberate. The windshield is large and the mirror is small because what's in front of you is far more important than what's behind you. Think about what happens when that proportion gets reversed. When the mirror gets bigger than the windshield. When the past takes up more of your attention than the road ahead. You drift. You miss what's coming. You become so focused on what already happened: the mistake, the loss, the version of yourself that no longer exists, that you stop seeing what's directly in front of you, available right now, waiting to be engaged with. This doesn't mean the past doesn't matter. It means it already happened. The life in front of you is the only one still in motion. The only one where your choices register. The only one where today's decision can change tomorrow's direction. That's where your attention belongs. Through the windshield. On what's coming. On what's possible. On the road that is still, right now, entirely open. Tony Robbins [https://greatnewspodcast.com/tag/tony-robbins/] famously said, "the past does not equal the future". [https://greatnewspodcast.com/tony-robbins-the-past-does-not-equal-the-future/] What matters most is where you choose to go next.Growth happens when you stop replaying old chapters and start writing new ones.Your mistakes, setbacks, and disappointments do not get the final word. Your next decision does. Your next habit does. Your next step does. So instead of living in what was, focus on what can be. The future is still open, and that is where your power lives. In a previous episode of the Daily Quote we covered Dr. Benjamin Hardy [https://greatnewspodcast.com/buddha-do-not-dwell-in-the-past-do-not-dream-of-the-future-concentrate-the-mind-on-the-present-moment/]'s concept that the future determines your present and the present determines the past. This concept, at first exposure seems backwards. How is it possible that the future shapes your present. How can the present change your past? We don't have time machines yet. Right? Well Dr. Benjamin Hardy's point is that the past does shape the present because in the present we can choose what the past means. The tragedy, suffering, abuse, failures of the past can crush you and hold you down or they can propel you forward. Depending on what meaning you assign them in the present. You can't change the past but you can change what the past means to you. And the future shapes your present because if you expect more of the same in the future it isn't very compelling. It doesn't motivate you to take action. But if you envision a compelling future. One that excites you and inspires you and one you truly want then you will be motivated to do the things you need to do today to get there. In this way, the future determines your present. So dream big and imagine a compelling future that will give you the juice to do the needed work today so you will live that compelling dream in your future. So here's the question: What aspect of your past is holding you back that maybe assigning a new meaning to it would transform how you think about your life today? And what compelling future can you imagine that will give you the energy to actually make it a reality? Are you looking through the windshield or the rearview mirror? That's going to do it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern signing off for now but I'll back tomorrow. Same pod time, same pod station with another Daily Quote.

6. juni 20267 min
episode René Descartes - "To live without philosophizing is in truth the same as keeping the eyes closed without attempting to open them." cover

René Descartes - "To live without philosophizing is in truth the same as keeping the eyes closed without attempting to open them."

Welcome to the Daily Quote [https://greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast [https://greatnewspodcast.com/podcast] and the link is in the show notes. Today's quote comes from René Descartes, 17th century French philosopher, mathematician, and the man whose single most famous sentence... "I think, therefore I am", became the foundation of modern Western philosophy. From the preface of his Principles of Philosophy, he wrote: "To live without philosophizing is in truth the same as keeping the eyes closed without attempting to open them." Before you decide this quote isn't for you because you're not a philosopher, hear what Descartes is actually saying. He's not asking you to read Kant. He's not asking you to write a dissertation or resolve the mind-body problem over breakfast. When he says philosophizing, he means something far more immediate and personal: the deliberate, honest act of examining your life. Questioning your assumptions. Asking why you believe what you believe, want what you want, and live the way you live. Looking, with genuine curiosity, at the things most people walk past without ever really seeing. Descartes makes the contrast explicit in the same passage, it is better to use your own eyes to direct your steps than to blindly follow the guidance of another, though even that is better than keeping the eyes closed with no guide except one's self. The closed eyes aren't a neutral position. They are a choice, the choice to move through life on autopilot, accepting the inherited assumptions, the default settings, the unexamined beliefs handed to you by circumstance and never questioned.Socrates said it 2,000 years earlier: "the unexamined life is not worth living." Descartes says the same thing through a different lens, the life lived without examination is the life lived with eyes closed. Not blind by accident. Blind by habit.Descartes also said: "doubt is the origin of wisdom." The open eye doesn't just accept what it sees, it questions it. It looks twice. It asks whether what appeared to be true actually is. That willingness to look honestly, to doubt, to examine, that is philosophizing. And it requires nothing more than the decision to stop sleepwalking through your own existence. So here's the question: Where in your life are you currently moving with your eyes closed, accepting without examining, living without questioning, following without looking? Because Descartes isn't asking you to have the answers. He's asking you to open your eyes to the questions. That's the whole practice. That's the examined life. Open your eyes. Look at what's actually there. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern — I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

I går4 min
episode Rumi - "You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean, in a drop." cover

Rumi - "You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean, in a drop."

Welcome to the Daily Quote [greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast [https://greatnewspodcast.com/podcast] and the link is right here in the show notes. Today's quote comes from Rumi, 13th century Persian poet, Islamic scholar, and Sufi mystic, considered one of the greatest poetic geniuses and spiritual masters of all time. From his Masnavi, he wrote: "You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean, in a drop."You know the phrase he's pushing back against. You are just a drop in the ocean. It's meant to be humbling, to place you in proportion to the vastness of the world, the cosmos, all of time and space. The scale of everything that exists beyond the edges of your individual life. And there is something true in it. We are small. The universe is incomprehensibly large. By every measure of scale, one human life occupies an almost imperceptible fraction of everything that is. Rumi accepts the image. And then he inverts the entire meaning of it. You are not a drop lost in the ocean, an insignificant particle of something too vast to comprehend. You are the ocean itself, present in full within the drop. This is the beating heart of Sufi mysticism, the belief that people's relationship to God, to the universe, and to each other is not one of separation but of intimate, total presence. Think about what it means to carry an ocean inside you. Every capacity for compassion, creativity, courage, and connection you have ever witnessed in another human being, that capacity lives in you too, in some form, waiting for the conditions that call it forward.The drop doesn't need to become the ocean. It already is the ocean. The real question is whether you believe it.I remember getting a serious setback at work years ago. At first I was angry and frustrated. And then I said my little problem is nothing compared to all the suffering around the world. I guess I should look at it that way. And my manager said no... Don't try to reduce yourself and impact this situation has on your life. And I thought about that and said yeah, you're right. Because it is easy to reduce your level of importance down to nothing when you look at the entire universe (infinity) and then add in unlimited parallel universes or dimensions. And then add all of time and your problems get less smaller and less significant the wider your viewpoint. But the problem is it isn't just the problems it is everything to do with YOU that is reduced by thinking this way.And if you think about it, in economics the more scarce something is the more valuable it becomes. So by making yourself so rare you are actually increasing your value. Remember you are unique, just like everyone else!You are not just a drop in the ocean, you are the ocean in a drop. Rumi's quote tells us to look deeper than the surface of the drop. To trust that what's inside is more than what appears from the outside. That the ocean isn't somewhere I'm trying to reach. It's what I already am, and what you already are, in whatever form this particular life has taken.So here's the question: Where in your life are you thinking your just a drop, when you are actually an ocean?Where are you making yourself small in your ambitions, your voice, your sense of what you're capable of in proportion to a vastness you don't yet recognize as your own?Because Rumi spent his entire life pointing at the same truth from every possible angle: what you are looking for is not out there. It is in here. All of it. Already.You are not a drop in the ocean. You are the entire ocean, in a drop. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern and I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

4. juni 20266 min
episode Unknown Author - "Some people talk big. Others wake up early." cover

Unknown Author - "Some people talk big. Others wake up early."

Welcome to the Daily Quote [https://greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern and this episode is once again brought to you by the Great News podcast [https://greatnewspodcast.com/podcast]. The link is in the show notes! Today's quote has no confirmed original author. There are many modern quotes that float around social media without ever being tied to an individual. This is one of them. The quote is: "Some people talk big. Others wake up early."There is nothing wrong with talking. Vision needs to be articulated. Plans need to be communicated. Inspiration matters. The word precedes the work in almost every meaningful venture. But somewhere between articulating the vision and doing the work, a gap opens up. And what lives in that gap, for most people, most of the time... is more talking. More planning. More refining. More sharing the idea before the idea has been tested by a single morning of actual effort. The quote doesn't say talkers are wrong. It says there are two kinds of people. And the distinction it draws is not between the optimistic and the cynical, the dreamer and the realist, the ambitious and the content. It's simpler and more honest than any of those. The distinction is between those whose ambition lives primarily in the telling and those whose ambition lives in the doing. Before the world is awake. Before the noise begins. Before there is any audience to perform for. Waking up early is a proxy for something deeper than a morning routine. It is the daily, unglamorous, unwitnessed choice to put in the work when nobody is watching and nothing is guaranteed. The 5am alarm doesn't go off for the version of you that other people see. It goes off for the version of you that you're building in private. The manuscript page before anyone reads it. The training session before the competition. The episode before the audience hears it. The skill being sharpened before it pays. Denzel Washington said do what you have to do to do what you want to do. Steve Martin said be so good they can't ignore you. This quote is what both of those look like at 5am, when the talking is done and the only thing left is the work.So here's the question... and it's a direct one: Is there something in your life that you have been talking about more than working on? Because the gap between where you are and where you want to be is not closed by better articulation of the vision. It's closed by the quiet, consistent, unwitnessed work. The kind that happens before the world is paying attention.Some people talk big. Others wake up early. Which one are you? If your not a morning person just sub in stay up late and that might work for you. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern and I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

3. juni 20264 min
episode Francis Cheung - "It's like a metaphor for life. Every man stands alone." cover

Francis Cheung - "It's like a metaphor for life. Every man stands alone."

Welcome to the Daily Quote [greatnewspodcast.com/dailyquote], the podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host Andrew McGivern and this episode is brought to you by the Great News podcast [greatnewspodcast.com/podcast]. And you should listen because good news needs to be heard. Today's episode is a first for this podcast. Every quote I've featured has come from history, from books, from interviews. From someone I've read or studied but never met. Or at least don't know personally. Today's comes from someone I know. A good friend. Someone I was sitting next to when he said it. His name is Francis Cheung [https://www.linkedin.com/in/francis-cheung-1810951b/]. Frank holds a PhD in Bioengineering and Biomedical Engineering and he is a man whose mind operates at the intersection of science and human complexity. And several years ago, Frank and I were camping on Quadra Island, British Columbia. We were up early, the two of us, watching the sun rise over Rebecca Spit - a long, quiet stretch of beach with the ocean on both sides and nobody else in sight. Nobody, except for one man. Standing alone out on the sand, facing the waves, completely still. And Frank looked at the scene, paused, and said: "It's like a metaphor for life. Every man stands alone." The people in the tents next to us laughed. I don't think they were laughing at Frank. I think they were just surprised that Frank was such a philosopher. I wasn't surprised at all but I still found the moment funny. There's something about a solitary figure on a beach at dawn that goes beyond the intellect and speaks directly to something deeper. The ocean doesn't care how many people are watching. The waves arrive regardless. And no matter how many people you have in your life there are moments where you face the ocean alone. Where the enormity of things meets you as an individual. That's what Frank saw in that man on the sand. Not loneliness. Solitude. And there's a world of difference between the two.Loneliness is the unwanted absence of connection. Solitude is the honest recognition that some things can only be faced from within. Your interior life... the questions that keep you up at night, the values you're trying to live by, the meaning you're building from your particular experience of being alive. Nobody else can navigate that for you. You stand at that shoreline alone. Every man. Every woman. Every person, regardless of how loved, how surrounded, how connected. The great philosophers understood this. Montaigne, who we featured in this podcast, retreated to his tower to think. Thoreau went to Walden Pond. Jung descended into his own unconscious. Frank probably focuses on the force. Not to escape the world, but to face something in it that could only be faced alone. I've thought about that morning on Rebecca Spit many times since. The stillness of it. The sun coming up over the water. One man out there on the sand doing something that looked like nothing which was actually, as Frank immediately understood, everything. What Frank captured in that single sentence was something a PhD in philosophy might have taken a whole chapter to say. This podcast, in its own small way, is my version of standing at that shoreline. Showing up every day, by myself... facing something, trying to make sense of it. Alone in the doing of it and even though your listening right now, I won't know about it. Okay, enough of the cheesy metaphors... I'm not as good as Frank at this, clearly.So here's the question: When did you last allow yourself to stand at the metaphorical shoreline? To be with the vast, quiet, unanswerable things, without filling the silence, without reaching for your phone, without making the solitude into something more comfortable than it needs to be? Because Frank is right. Every man stands alone. Not as a tragedy. As a truth. And a truth, honestly faced, is always the beginning of something good. That's it for today. I'm Andrew McGivern I'll see you in the next one with another Daily Quote.

2. juni 20266 min