How to have a good ... errrr ... great day
when good is not good enough
Let me show you how to have a great day.
Most of us say we’re “good” when someone asks how we’re doing, but here’s what I learned from my first boss Jean. When I told him I was good, he asked me something that changed everything: “What would it take to be great?” That single question transformed how I approach each day.
A great day starts with one simple shift - changing that automatic “good” response to “great.” It sounds small, but this word recalibrates your entire mindset. When you say you’re great, you start noticing the little things that bring joy. You become less bothered by minor inconveniences.
My friend Lynette discovered this on a delayed flight. Instead of complaining, she reminded herself and a frustrated passenger that they were going home to their families - and isn’t that great? By the time they boarded, that man’s whole attitude had shifted from anger to enthusiasm.
Here’s the secret: when you consistently replace “good” with “great,” you transform more than your vocabulary. You invite mindfulness into your life. You start appreciating what you have right now. You become more present with the people who matter.
A great day doesn’t require perfection. It requires choosing to see beyond the ordinary, to embrace enthusiasm over just getting by. So tomorrow morning, when someone asks how you are, try saying “great” and watch how it changes everything.


