“The best way to predict your future is to create it.”
Abraham Lincoln
This is the thought I’m carrying into the week.
I don’t know about you, but I can sometimes find myself waiting for things to line up just right before moving forward. The better schedule. The quieter week. The clearer plan. The perfect moment when everything finally feels settled.
But most weeks do not arrive that neatly.
There is usually something unfinished, something uncertain, and something competing for attention. So this week, I’m trying to focus less on waiting for ideal conditions and more on taking the next useful step.
Not the biggest step. Not the final step. Just the next one.
One useful step can change the tone of the week
There is something encouraging about making even a little progress.
A task that has been sitting around for too long feels lighter once it is started. A conversation that has been avoided often feels less intimidating once it begins. A goal that feels too broad can become a little more manageable when it is broken down into something small enough to do today.
That is what I appreciate about this quote. It does not need to be complicated. It is simply a reminder that the future is not only something we wait for. In small ways, we participate in shaping it.
That might look like making the call, setting the appointment, cleaning up the calendar, reviewing the numbers, finishing the project, or getting one step closer to a decision.
Real estate planning often starts this way too
In real estate, people sometimes assume the process starts when they are fully ready to buy or sell.
In my experience, it often starts much earlier and much more casually. A homeowner wonders what their property might be worth. A buyer starts thinking about what a payment would actually look like. A family begins talking through timing. Someone looks around the house and realizes a few projects would be easier to handle now than later.
Those early steps do not have to create pressure. In fact, they usually do the opposite.
A little information can make the process feel less blurry. A simple conversation can help sort out what matters now, what can wait, and what may not need to be worried about at all.
No need to rush the future
Creating the future you want does not mean forcing everything to happen immediately.
Sometimes the wisest move is to wait. Sometimes the right answer is “not yet.” Sometimes the best thing you can do is gather information, get organized, and give yourself room to make a better decision later.
That still counts as progress.
For someone thinking about buying, selling, relocating, or investing in Spokane, North Spokane, Coeur d’Alene, or the greater Inland Northwest, a useful first step might simply be getting clearer on the options. What is the home worth? What would need to be done before listing? What would the numbers look like on a purchase? What kind of timing would actually work for the family?
Those are good questions. And good questions often make the next step easier to see.
A simple thought for the week
Maybe the goal this week is not to overhaul everything.
Maybe it is just to choose one thing worth moving forward.
One task. One conversation. One decision. One small piece of preparation. One thing that makes the rest of the week feel a little less stuck.
That is what I’m hoping to do this week, and I hope it is helpful for you too.
The future can feel like a big word. But today’s next step is usually much more manageable.
Final thought
“The best way to predict your future is to create it.”
That is a good reminder for a Monday morning.
Whatever you are working on this week, I hope you find a practical way to move it forward.
And if part of your future involves buying, selling, or simply thinking through a real estate move in Spokane, North Spokane, Coeur d’Alene, or the Inland Northwest, I would be glad to help you sort through the options with clarity and care.