The Groundhog Day is a 1993 classic movie starring Phil Connors (Bill Murray in the role). 

The movie is about a weatherman who got stuck in a time loop and due to this, he has to keep repeating the same day (2nd February) as Groundhog Day in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania. To escape from the loop, Phil tries everything, even suicide, but he fails to escape it.

The film is about rebirth yet in quick forward for amusement.

He begins as an inner self-driven, narrow-minded individual who lives just for self-delight.

Along these lines, he carries on with a progression of lives that go no place. After various carries on one day to the next like this life becomes aimless and to get away from the suicides start (numerous spirits are at this stage). Nonetheless, it is quite difficult! Passing is certainly not an exit plan he simply gets returned to and needs to begin once again! At the centre of the film, he finds that how he helps personal growth stays with him for the following round/life. At last, eventually, he understands that utilizing his gifts to help other people is the genuine prize.

This film has profound importance behind it. On the off chance that you feel like regular is something very similar, you probably won’t be in the correct course.
It could cut to the chase of profound despondency and feeling of sadness, yet committing suicide isn’t the response (Like in the film).
Investigate your interests, find what genuinely satisfies you and stick to it, and furthermore, an ally for the ride wouldn’t do any harm.

In a snapshot of depression, Phil goes two or three lushes at a bowling alley bar and asks them, “How might you respond assuming that you were trapped in one spot, and consistently was the very same, and essentially nothing that you did had any significance?”
It’s the inquiry Phil needs to respond to propel the plot of the film, but at the same time it’s the inquiry we need to address to propel the plot of our lives.

Summary

As per the Richmond Walker in his book  Twenty Four Hours a day “It is only when we add the burden of those two awful eternities, yesterday and tomorrow, that we break down. It is not the experience of today that drives men mad. It is remorse or bitterness for something which happened yesterday or the dread of what tomorrow may bring. Let us, therefore, do our best to live but one day at a time.”

P.S. :- Yesterday’s over, tomorrow may never come, there’s just today and what you can do with it.