Thursday, January 8, 2026

Meeting the excitement and pressure of the new year

8th day of the new year.

A great moment to check in. How are you doing? How are you feeling? Energy level?

The first days of the new year come with a lot of excitement and a lot of pressure.

Excitement for the sense of renewal, and becoming better versions of ourselves. Excitement in putting the last year to rest and starting with a clean slate. Excitement at putting down some old habits and picking up some new habits.

Pressure to become better, to change, to have ambitious goals. We feel that pressure each time someone innocently asks us about our new year’s resolutions. However, a lot of the pressure in January is self-inflicted. It comes from a very good place – our desire to improve and enhance our lives and our living. And pressure, whether external or internal, can be a very good motivator for us to do things we would not otherwise do. Think back to coaches, teachers, and bosses you have had. The ones that got the most out of you probably did so through a healthy amount of pressure to succeed.

A few thoughts as we link arms to accept the challenge and opportunity that 2026 provides us, motivated by both the excitement and pressure to make some good changes.

First, the need to be flexible. I had a patient this week who proudly told me they want to exercise every day this year. It was the 5th day of the year when they told me, and they had not yet started. So, their ability to move the start date back a few days is going to be a key to their success. Many folks who set the same goal would have already given up if they hadn’t started on January 1st.

Second, if you don’t feel like you have had a chance to set meaningful goals for 2026, make space to do just that. The holidays can get busy and lots of us emerge from them without having had the time to reflect on what we want to work on. Take part or even the entire month of January to come up with goals for yourself. This isn’t a timed test. Take as much time as you need.

Third, find and build your community that will support you in these goals. Life is a much easier game when we are surrounded by family and friends, neighbors and classmates, co-workers and supporters. Strengthening your community may even become a goal in itself for the new year.

Last, once you have goals in hand, I like the 3-2-1 method for getting started. Think about the 3-day, 2-week and 1-month perspective on the goal. This is the art of making bite sized morsels out of an overwhelmingly-sized cake. Take, for example, a goal of trying to learn to swim. The 3-day goal might be to sign-up for swim lessons. The two-week goal might be to find a bathing suit. And the 1-month goal might be to have had a few lessons, to feel slightly more comfortable in the water. The bigger goal has been broken into immediate, achievable steps.

Have fun as we kick off the 2026 journey together.





3 comments:

  1. To recognize each day as a unique opportunity to express Love, gratitude and appreciation is my goal this year and always. To have eyes to see where I can be of service is my desire. To live each day as if it were my last is my hope. To be in the NOW and know that is all that is real my dream.
    T

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  2. To hold all beings, without exception, in loving grace. To have the space in my mind, body, and soul to act as a healer, a teacher, and a writer through both light and dark circumstances. To invite healing and restoration to anyone who has suffered (that would be all of us).
    To use writing and movement as vehicles to support personal healing, and to serve the greater good.
    Okay, that might be more than one thing. So much to do!
    Dance when you can, grieve when you must.

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  3. 2025 was a great year for me and my partner, so we're looking forward with hope to the promise that 2026 holds. Yes, living in and enjoying the moment, attending to our relationships, and rolling with whatever life throws our way is what we hope to do! Blessings and peace as 2026 unfolds ..JR.

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