Happy New Year!
I hope your parties all went well and that you had a lovely evening. We went down an visited my parents and we were all asleep by 11 and slept in until 9, so we had an awesome New Years Eve. Best sleep ever. Except when the neighbors started their fireworks and the dogs panicked and tried to dig through the front door (goofy dogs). Other than that, best sleep ever.
So...today's topic? A Pinstrosity waiting to happen: New Year's Resolutions. Now, don't exit out yet. I used to try the whole New Years Resolution thing, but who actually finishes them? I'm sure there are success stories of accomplishing your resolution, but I haven't heard them yet.
Why don't we hear many "I did it!" stories? A few reasons.
- We pick things that are too broad. "I want to lose weight." Great. Make that your N.Y.R. around 3 p.m. one day, and then the next day after you have gotten up and out of bed and visited your john you've accomplished your goal. But that wasn't really the real goal there. "I want to live healthier." "I want to spend less." Those are all admirable goals...but all too often I think we leave them at that one broad statement.
- This one kinda goes along with the previous one...but we don't give ourselves a finish mark. "I want to lose 20 pounds" is a little better than "I want to lose weight" because it gives you a specific goal to work towards. But then often we give ourselves an outlandish finish mark and we want to finish it by March.
- We make a N.Y.R. that requires a regular schedule. "I want to exercise 3 times every week." So as soon as you don't fulfill one week you feel like you've blown your entire resolution and why keep trying.
- We pick something outlandish. "I want to sing on stage with the remaining members of Queen while wearing THE Michael Jackson glove." Probably not going to happen.
- Then of course nature works against us, the minions plot to ruin our lives, Karma has a few good kicks we may or may not deserve, and we just don't get done what we want to.
I had quit doing New Years Resolutions because they just didn't get done and/or they got forgotten about by March (at the latest). But then I happened on an idea, and this year will mark my 4th year doing it and it's revolutionized my New Years Resolution making. One of my friends put together a list for herself of 101 things she wanted to do in 1001 days. I thought that was an awesome idea, but I knew that 1001 days (which is over 2.5 years) was a little large of a scope for me. So I decided that I was going to make me a list of 101 things I wanted to do that year. It took me a month to come up with 101 things that first time, but I finally got my list made. This year will be my 4th list and I'm excited to get working on it.
Now, I know what you're thinking because this is what I thought at first: "101 things?! Are you kidding? No way I could do that." Don't exit yet either.
Now, I know what you're thinking because this is what I thought at first: "101 things?! Are you kidding? No way I could do that." Don't exit yet either.
This "101 Things in [insert year here]" list ends up being like my bucket list for the year. I put anything on there, big or small. I'm not quite done making this year's list, but a few things I have on there are "Get my hair layered," "paint a picture", "type of 3 of my old journals", and "learn 10 new recipes". They are simple things, but they are things I want to do this year. I find doing this list also helps me to work towards some of the larger goals I have. I want to write a book someday, so I have some small goals on my list to help me work towards that. I won't have a book written by the end of the year, but I will have some progress made.
So what does this "101 Things" list do for me that a New Year's Resolution doesn't?
- It gives me narrow goals. I know what I mean by "get my hair layered." Yes, that is still up to interpretation, but it's definitely better than "do something different with my hair."
- I have finish marks. As I complete items on the list, I can cross them off. I see progress being done. I keep track of my progress on my blog so that I can put links to finished projects, articles that helped, and then it's like show-and-tell. It may be that no-one ever actually looks at that page, but some might and so it helps me want to check things off the list and it's fun to show what I've been able to accomplish.
- I have all year to work on the items. I can have individual items on a schedule (one of mine this past year was to go on a walk or hike with Cameron at least once a month), but the whole list is not on a daily, weekly, or monthly schedule.
- If one item is outlandish...it's only 1 in 101. The whole list isn't blown if that one item doesn't get done.
- I know that as I go through the year I will find new hobbies and interests and that I will change and grow, so by August I may actually not be interested in doing some of the things I was interested in doing back in January. So I view this list not as a list of "must dos or your year was a piece of poop", but more as a "you might try this and just see how many you can get done". Don't expect to finish everything on the list.
- Some days when I'm bored I go through my list and get ideas of what to do.
Here are just a few things that I accomplished from my list in 2012:
Made a homemade bouquet for a friend:
http://madebymarquette.blogspot.com/2012/06/wildflower-bouquet.html |
Got rocks gathered for our future patio/picnic area:
http://madebymarquette.blogspot.com/p/patio-project_08.html |
And we even got to try some fun new food:
http://mowercooking.blogspot.com/2012/02/apple-pie.html |
So if you're like me and you've given up on New Year's Resolutions, give this a try. I love it and it is so much more doable and fun. I wasn't hugely into Pinterest yet when I wrote last years, but as soon as I've got this year's list done I have a Pinterest board waiting to pin things on it to help me accomplish the things on my list. I'm sure there will be a few Pinstrosities along the way, but that's part of the fun of it.
To view 2012's list, click here.
To see my 2013 list click here.
To view 2012's list, click here.
To see my 2013 list click here.
No comments:
Post a Comment