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A Little New Year Foolishness

I’m a long-time year-end planner and I’ve gone about it a pile of ways. I’ll save you the gory details except to say that I’ve found that having a lot of those such details didn’t make me more productive or more capable of achieving anything. Instead, it mostly just made me more disappointed when I looked back at the end of the year because I was hyper-focused on what I hadn’t checked off of those lists and not on what I had accomplished instead.

So this year, Theresa and I tried something new by spending a good chunk of this past weekend:

  1. Picking our 3 words for the year, a la Chris Brogan

  2. Deciding on the routines and habits about which we’d like to be more consistent in 2019

  3. Reviewing 2018

Three Words

I dig this because it’s simple and thought-provoking, and gives us bigger pockets from which to work than, say, “Learn Spanish and lose 10 pounds.” Inspired by Chris Brogan’s approach, we each chose words that felt good to us – as in gut-check, happy tingles, sitting well, literal feel good – and that captured a complexity of ideas.

Mine are:

Routines and Habits

There are things in here that could lead to us being healthier or dropping a few pounds. There are things in here that could lead to us being more centered or connected or productive. But this year, we’ve decided to focus on the things that feel good and fulfilling for their own sake: Meditation, journaling, reading, movement, eating food that feels really good to eat both in the moment and in the hours afterwards.

The efforts, we control. The outcomes will be what they will be.

2018 Review

I have never done this before. How have I never done this before?! Over the course of the weekend, we sat down here and there to review my calendar (which is a little obsessive in its detail) to make a list of key moments and events that ran for a half-dozen or more pages in our shared journal.

There were little fun things like movies we particularly liked and big scary things like an ER run for one family member and a hospital stay for another. There were trips and dates and productive discord and volunteer work. There were three major challenges to our shared fear of heights: Rappelling down the Patrick Henry Hotel, a ropes course, and climbing a light house.

It was a full year. A year with plenty of challenges and lots of laughter, significant growth and abundant tears, and all those surprises that makes “man plans, god laughs,” one of my favorite sayings.

However you say goodbye to the year that has been and welcome in the year to come, I hope it comes from a place of self-love, endless possibility, and joy – boatloads of joy.

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