this quote means that when a person does not plans for his or her future, and live for the present , there future might end up bad or unsuccessful.
Today is today. If today is tomorrow and tomorrow is yesterday, it creates a paradoxical situation where today is always today, regardless of the labels given to it.
No. It will be nice tough
There is no direct opposite.The opposite by schedule is "tonight" but today can refer to the entire calendar period, not only to the daytime portion.
Sometimes it seems as though I live at my workplace. Live at the MetroDome in downtown Miami tomorrow night only! It's the Kodiaks!
Today is all I have. We can do nothing to change what has gone before. We can only decide, every day, the kind of person we choose to be for that one day. or Do not take concern over yesterday, or tomorrow, but only of today for nothing can be retrieved from yesterday, and tomorrow has not yet come. ~Aiobheal
In order to answer this question, it would be necessary not only to send somebody into 'tomorrow', but also to have him return to 'today' and report to us on what he saw. Ain't ever happened yet.
The Death Clock (linked below) can give an estimate on an individual lifespan. Remember, this is only an estimate. Don't worry about that and just live your life. It says in the Bible that you shouldn't worry about tomorrow but about today.
Yess they live in an island that only mason an Gabe have been on and where going there tomorrow
I can only name 2.Thursday and TuesdayThere are also today and tomorrow!
It is today. It is not an official day. "Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin." ― Mother Teresa
Morals and morality are constantly changing and also differ from place to place. Only 150 years ago homosexuality was punishable with prison, now its accepted. In some cultures multiple wives are allowed, in ours its a crime. It is generally considered that birth control is a virtue but in the past, and unfortunately in some cultures in the present, it is considered a vice. So a vice today may, in the changed world of tomorrow, be considered a virtue (ie a good thing). And vice-versa ; virtue today, vice tomorrow.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, our 32nd president of the USA was the man who stated this quote.