Scripture: Lamentations 2:22-23
When the future feels uncertain, hope can feel fragile. This chapter reflects on trusting God, staying open, and learning to keep showing up for tomorrow.
Read this chapter →Life Library Book
Tomorrow explores hope, vision, and the future that is still being written. It reflects on rebuilding, patience, second chances, and learning to move forward without needing certainty.
You will find chapters about planning for a better life, trusting the process, and carrying hope through seasons that feel unclear. These reflections focus on small, consistent steps and the belief that what comes next still matters.
If you are learning to look ahead again—even with hesitation—this is where that future begins to take shape.
This category is one of the six main Life Library Books. Browse all six Books, use Start Here to choose by season, or read more about Donald Faulknor, writing as A Work in Progress.
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Scripture: Lamentations 2:22-23
When the future feels uncertain, hope can feel fragile. This chapter reflects on trusting God, staying open, and learning to keep showing up for tomorrow.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Psalm 78:4
One day, my children will look back on me — not as I was in a single moment, but as I showed up over time. That future version of me is already being written, one ordinary day at a time.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Micah 7:8
There are seasons when the future doesn't look like a destination — it looks like fog. And maybe vision isn't about seeing far ahead, but about trusting the next step enough to take it.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Psalm 27:14
I still hope — but not the way I used to. Hope now feels quieter, slower, and more deliberate. It no longer demands outcomes; it waits with intention.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Isaiah 32:8
Some of the most important work I do for tomorrow happens quietly — without recognition, without certainty, and without anyone noticing how heavy it feels to carry.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Psalm 56:3
Some days I speak about tomorrow with confidence. Other days, I'm quietly terrified that I'll get it wrong again. Both versions of me are telling the truth.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Luke 16:10
I used to think tomorrow required answers. I'm learning that what it really asks for is consistency — small, faithful decisions repeated long enough to matter.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Isaiah 30:18
I don't need tomorrow to prove anything to me anymore. I just need to stay open enough to receive it when it arrives.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Ecclesiastes 9:10
I used to think tomorrow would arrive with clarity or change. Lately, it shows up quietly — and I'm learning that might be the point.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Psalm 37:4
There's a future I carry quietly — one shaped by love, family, and second chances. I don't talk about it much, not because it's small, but because it matters too much to handle carelessly.
Read this chapter →Scripture: 1 Samuel 16:7
I wanted to be a father long before I understood what it would cost me emotionally. And somewhere along the way, I had to ask a harder question: was I unprepared for parenthood — or simply never allowed to grow into it on my own?
Read this chapter →Scripture: 1 Samuel 16:7
I learned how to work before I learned how to rest. And while that discipline kept me alive, I refuse to let it cost me my children.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Proverbs 19:2
I used to believe success came from urgency. Now I see it more clearly: patience doesn't delay progress — it refines it.
Read this chapter →Scripture: Romans 5:8
I still live with the quiet fear that love is conditional — that it must be earned, maintained, and continually proven. And that fear has shaped more of my decisions than I'd like to admit.
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