Break the Cycle of New Year’s Resolution Disappointment

Why therapists recommend principles over resolutions

Kathleen Smith
Forge

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Photo: Taiyou Nomachi/Getty

TThe beginning of the year is a fantastic time to be a therapist. Every January, anxious overachievers across the country pour into offices like mine, equipped with fresh planners and sleek new gym clothes. They list their New Year’s resolutions, outline their goals, or announce the “word of the year” they’re determined to personify.

You don’t have to be a therapist to know what happens next. Roughly 80% of the resolution-makers will abandon their goal, and most will spend the remaining months of the year beating themselves up, to varying degrees, for dropping the ball.

But I’ve noticed that the 20% who do manage to reach the finish line don’t feel much better off. I’ve had plenty of clients admit that they aren’t any more relaxed or content than they were the year before, even after accomplishing the goals they set for themselves. Running a half marathon is great, but it doesn’t help them get along with their mother or give them hope when the country feels like it’s going up in flames.

So, when people are skeptical of resolutions — and as you’ve probably guessed, I’m one of them — I encourage them instead to create New Year’s principles.

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