I will lose weight. I will start going to the gym. I will
spend less time on social media. I will
go back to school. I will get a new job.
I will learn a new skill. I will
practice mindfulness every day.
There are so many resolutions that are set every New Year’s
Eve and by the end of the first week or two of January, most have failed to see
them through.
This is because we do it all wrong. This doesn’t mean we should give up on this
great practice of thinking about what we want for the New Year. We just need to
look at them in a different way.
I don’t know about you, but I’m going to be eating yet
another huge meal New Year’s Day with family as the festive season winds
down. I’m off work for a few more days
and know I won’t start a new exercise regime or any other new habits for that
matter. Even if I managed to start something this week, I’ll have to figure out
how to do it again next week when I’m back at work and when the kids are back
in school.
So how can we set New Year’s Resolutions that we will stick
with and will make us feel successful in mid January, through February and into
the rest of the year.
Let’s start by looking back to the origins of the word. 14th
century French, resolution had to do with breaking things into parts. Latin resolutionem
suggests the idea of reducing things to a simpler form. I think the evolution of New Year’s Resolutions
to a list of things we will start on January 1st greatly decreases
the chances of success because we expect to start them all immediately, when
what we should be doing is setting those resolutions as the final step, the end
goal.
This year I may resolve to be healthier. To increase my chance of success, the next
step should be to break that down into simple steps. Week one might be simply to drink more water,
maybe two extra glasses a day. Week two,
as routine re-emerges with everyone back to school and work, I can add a short ten-minute
walk or perhaps just taking the stairs at work two days a week. That’s it. Keep it simple and achievable. Let those two routines settle in for a few
weeks then add another step. If we add
one small thing every three to four weeks, by the New Year’s Eve next year, we
will have added 12-17 new actions that help us towards our resolution, and we
will feel far more accomplished.
Some resolutions may take less time to fully implement. Cutting back on social media could mean just
tracking when and how much time is spent on various apps for a couple weeks. Then
perhaps the next step is to just cut out social media in the morning or in the
hour before bed for a month. Perhaps simply
cutting out a specific time of day was enough to keep social media in check and
our resolution is achieved before March.
We also don’t have to start all our resolutions in
January. Pick one for January. Schedule another for February. Have a resolution that coincides with
spring. The key is to have a plan. Write
it down. Put it in your calendar. Set
reminders.
So tonight, as you write down your New Year’s Resolutions, start
thinking of them as an end goal and start breaking them down into small steps
that you can begin throughout the year.
Then every week, every month, and every quarter you can review your progress
towards your goal.
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