Every Day New Year Resolutions!
Happy New Year! Hurry up, step aside, and let in all the New Year resolutions, the fresh new agendas, and the glimmering beautiful intentions.
“Now is the accepted time to make your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual.” -Mark Twain
Is the ritual of making New Year’s resolutions a way to usher hope? Is it a way to make our dream seem more attainable? Yes, we will make new resolutions and most of us will break them soon afterwards. Most of us will get back into our routines and fall back into last year’s schedule. And, of course, many of us will slump into depression for failing to realize them.
I have decided to stop making New Year resolutions and will not be making any this year or the next.
Oscar Wilde said, “Good resolutions are simply checks that men draw on a bank where they have no account.”
True then, and still true now. So, why should I bother? Easier said than done, people will say! But not for me. I am going to be resolution-free facing the New Year with an open mind “que sera sera.” Come January, many water cooler chats will involve lively discussions about resolutions. I will stay away from coolers and will keep my “no resolution” resolution to myself.
I remember my top four resolutions well, they were always the same and I bounced them from year to year to year. And as the year went by, I’d feel so frustrated with my imaginary scorecard. But I have come to realize that breaking New Year’s resolutions is as much of a ritual as making them. At least for me. No need to look for excuses, to stress and drive myself crazy. I will take my leisurely way to plan things all year long and I will revise and “recalculate” yes, like my GPS, as much as I want and whenever I feel like changing direction. So listen to me when I say: Forget stuffing all your good intentions this January and make the resolution not to make resolutions only at the beginning of each year. Here’s a recap of New Year’s resolutions that I will no longer be making:
- Quit smoking. I smoked for many years and on many New Year’s Eves I promised myself and others I’d quit. The months would come and go and I would still be smoking. But, one regular day in an uneventful month, I decided to try non-nicotine cigarettes. They smelled weird and tasted like smoking oregano but for some reason after the third pack I didn’t mind reaching for them. Was it the strange taste? Was it because I allowed them as my only option? Whatever it was those oregano cigarettes eventually worked … I stopped smoking. For some reason, I believed that smoking helped me with stress! I would reach for one, with drop-dead deadlines or whenever life happened. Nicotine cravings lasted for a while until they dissipated! ‘The force will be with you’ when you decide to quit. You will be able to. I was able to quit, and you will too, when you’re ready to do it!
- Join a gym. I wanted so much to find that healthy routine of gym going and every year I’d make a resolution to join one. Many memberships later, that gym routine eluded me. I guess I found that I like to walk and work in my garden and so this is what I do now. I have gained a little weight but I try not to be too upset about it and to keep things in check, not to indulge too much. This reminds me of what Jay Leno said once, and that puts it all in perspective, “Now there are more overweight people in America than average-weight people. So overweight people are now average. Which means you’ve met your New Year’s resolution.”
- Move closer to family. Every year around family gatherings, I would promise everyone and myself that I would move to be closer to everyone. And, every year, routines take over and I wouldn’t. Until one day, I decided to do just that and I have never looked back.
- Focus on my writing. That was a resolution for many years until one day, not a January day, I sat down and started writing my first book. And another and another.
So I have given up on New Year’s resolutions but I have not given up on making resolutions. They are good to make to get centered and focused toward a goal. But, I’ve learned to make them on a daily basis and throughout the year. I’ve also learned that kids like to make them too. A teacher once shared with me how much kids enjoyed planning their agenda after winter break. And, here my suggestion for an activities agenda in the form of a colorful chart! Just like visualization is a part of manifestation, writing yearly goals and dreams might bring things into focus at family and school gatherings and prove to be informative for all. In addition to creating new memories, it might unveil some hidden aspirations that can be helped to flourish. Here are the basic questions:
- What did I discover last year about myself, my home, my friends?
- What I disliked finding out the most.
- What I hated all last year but don’t mind now.
- What I plan to try next year.
- Last year, my favorite things to do were…
- This year, I am most looking forward to…
Hopefully this year, we’ll find a way to de-stress. We’ll start by deleting stressful resolutions and come up with a happiness plan of action for the entire year. We’ll keep it real and not reach for unattainable goals. Maybe losing 10 pounds instead of 40 to start. Maybe saving $10 dollars a month is a better idea than $100 to start with and maybe walking 2 miles a day is more reasonable than joining a gym. Maybe we’ll find a way to be happy with what we have and resolve to go after what makes us happy in a realistic way. Maybe we’ll stop trying to keep up with Joneses! And, maybe then we will discover the blessings that we already have!