06-16-2026
©2026 BTMT-TJ
V2
Few things create more anxiety than the future. Today may have its challenges, yet at least we can see what is in front of us. Tomorrow is different. It exists beyond our sight, hidden behind a curtain we cannot pull back. That uncertainty can feel unsettling because we are moving toward something we cannot fully understand or predict.
Most of us like to believe we know how our lives will unfold. We make plans, set goals, and create expectations about what comes next. Life has a way of reminding us that certainty is often an illusion. A single conversation, unexpected loss, new opportunity, or unforeseen challenge can change everything in an instant. No matter how carefully we prepare, we cannot guarantee a specific outcome.
Much of our fear about tomorrow comes from our resistance to change. We worry that something important may end or that we will be forced to face circumstances we do not feel prepared to handle. The mind begins creating stories about what could go wrong, and before long we find ourselves living in imagined futures that may never happen.
In Buddhism, this fear is closely tied to the reality of impermanence. Everything changes. Relationships evolve, careers shift, seasons pass, and circumstances rise and fall. Accepting this truth is difficult because human beings naturally seek stability and certainty. Fear often convinces us that control is the answer. We believe that if we plan enough, analyze enough, or prepare enough, we can protect ourselves from disappointment.
The problem is that the pursuit of control often creates more suffering than the uncertainty itself. The harder we try to control every outcome, the more exhausted we become. Relationships can suffer, stress increases, and life becomes consumed by worrying about possibilities that may never occur.
Fear is not the enemy. It is a natural human response to uncertainty. The goal is not to eliminate fear but to prevent it from directing our lives. Courage is not the absence of fear. Courage is moving forward despite it.
One lesson I continue to learn is that trusting tomorrow requires courage. There are no guarantees that the future will be easy. Tomorrow may bring disappointment, heartbreak, or unexpected challenges. Life offers no promise of a painless path.
What is easy to forget is that uncertainty works both ways. The future does not only hold the possibility of hardship. It also holds the possibility of healing, growth, joy, connection, and opportunities we cannot yet see. The same tomorrow we fear may contain the breakthrough we have been waiting for.
Since none of us can know what tomorrow holds, we have a choice. We can spend today fearing possibilities that may never arrive, or we can meet the future with openness and trust. Acceptance does not mean giving up. It means recognizing the limits of our control and finding peace within those boundaries.
The more I have practiced this mindset, the more I have realized that much of the suffering surrounding the future originates in the stories created by my own mind. The unknown often appears far more frightening from a distance than it does when we finally arrive there. Many of the situations I once feared became challenges I survived, learned from, and grew through.
Whenever uncertainty feels overwhelming, I remind myself of a simple truth: there is always a way forward. The path may not be obvious, but there is always a next step. The future does not have the power to defeat us. Our greatest obstacle is often the story we tell ourselves about what the future means.
Tomorrow will arrive whether we welcome it or not. Rather than meeting it with dread, we can choose to meet it with curiosity, courage, and trust. Whatever awaits us, we have survived every difficult day up to this point. That alone is proof that we are stronger than our fears would have us believe.
.
.
