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January 2006 : Vol IV : Issue I

"Help!" With New Year's Resolutions
By Ellen Corsi

Another year has come and gone, and whether or not we want to reflect upon it, we very rarely can avoid evaluating our life during the past year. The holiday season is a time to celebrate, but is also that time of year where we start looking back and reflecting upon what we have or have not accomplished. We also may not even remember what we decided to accomplish as a New Year's resolution from the previous year. That happens a lot with the New Year's resolutions game.

You may have made a great career move last year, or bought a condo or a new house, or paid a lot of bills off to ease your wallet, or maybe you just basically did what you usually do, which is to go with the ebb and flow of life, and take what comes to you.

New Year's resolutions are a tricky thing. They start out with wonderful intentions, but as time passes, this vow to make a change, whether it is career motivated, or a personal goal, can get lost in the shuffle of everyday life.

I look at New Year's resolutions as 'goals' that I would like to achieve for the New Year. This way it takes a lot of the pressure off, especially if it is a lofty goal that I would like to achieve in the upcoming twelve months. I look at New Year's resolutions as a good time to reflect and think about where your life is headed, and where you want to take it from here.

New Year's resolutions should be attainable goals for the next twelve months. They should be realistic, as well. Whoever invented the idea of New Year's resolutions, I'm sure, looked at it as a way to move ourselves ahead by making a promise or goal that would further or better us as individuals.

With resolve and determination, it is said, we can accomplish anything that we want to do. We can become anyone we want to, it just takes hard work and commitment. No matter how you look at New Year's resolutions, it can be pressure laden. When you make these decisions for the coming year, put much thought into it before you commit. By making it a 'goal' to achieve, not only takes some of the pressure off, but if you don't accomplish it in the next twelve months, it can be something to continue striving for, as opposed to failing to achieve it altogether.

I think you always need to have goals in front of you that you would like to achieve, anyway. I think that most people have dreams and ideas of what they ultimately would like out of life. New Year's resolutions are just a way, or time to sit, reflect and decide where you are in the scheme of all of your dreams.

I believe in taking small steps to achieve your more lofty resolutions or goals. By taking small steps, you can clearly see your progress, and feel good about what you have accomplished to-date. When you feel you have accomplished something, whether it is large or small, it tends to spur you on to go further. I believe in positive reinforcement, and when you have a lofty goal for the New Year, this is the way to keep from disappointing yourself.

By choosing attainable, realistic goals, you can feel great about making changes that can positively affect your life during the New Year.

Oh, yes, and then it will be time to do this all over again! So, good luck and Happy New Year! Have a fantastic 2006!


Another take on New Year Resolutions

New Year's Resolutions You Can and Should Keep

Here we go again! Another New Year means another round of New Year’s Resolutions—setting goals and trying to keep them. Or maybe not. In fact, if you’re like most people—70% according to the Harvard Business School—you don’t even have any goals. Another 25% have goals, but only 5% have goals and write them down. Amazingly enough—or perhaps it’s no surprise—those 5% who write their goals down enjoy greater professional and personal success than the other 95% combined. Wow. Those statistics should give us all reason to take this whole New Year’s resolutions business a lot more seriously than we do.

Make and Write Down Specific Resolutions The first step toward keeping resolutions is to make them specific and write them down.

  • A 1950’s psychologist named George Miller theorized that people can only deal with 7 bits of information at one time. More than 7 bits confuses and overwhelms most of us. So stick to no more than 7 resolutions.
  • And you have to be very clear about what you want: a new job, lose weight, quit drinking, get out of debt.
  • Get a journal and write those goals in it, very specifically detailing why they are important to you and what it would mean for you to achieve them.
  • Your resolutions can be general, but compose some incremental action steps. For example, if you resolve to lose weight, be very specific by saying, “Lose 30 lbs. by June by eating less than 1800 calories a day, exercising 45 minutes every day, and not drinking beer or eating ice cream.” That specificity will give you an action plan to work on keeping.
  • Also, try focusing on strengths rather than weaknesses. For example, rather than saying “I’ll quit drinking,” say “I’ll stay sober.” Success is more likely when engaging in a positive behavior than when trying to break a bad habit.

Keeping Your Resolutions Take action! Get started keeping your resolutions by tracking your progress.

  • Monitoring and following up is essential. In other words, you have to have a plan and work that plan. You have to stay on top of your resolutions every day, in your journal, writing down what you did and didn’t do toward achieving those goals.
  • You have to treat yourself like you’d treat somebody else: stay on your own case, question yourself, get angry at yourself if need be. You have to remind yourself and reinforce your resolutions every single day, correcting poor behavior and launching into better behavior, concrete actions that get you one step closer toward achieving your goal.
  • Base your resolutions on careful consideration and make a strong commitment to succeed no matter what it takes.
  • Try to anticipate the challenges that lie ahead and think of some strategies to cope with setbacks and difficulties.
  • Another great idea to help keep you committed is to share your resolutions with someone: your best friend, coach, or spouse. Also, post them on your refrigerator, office wall, and dashboard. Keep them in sight and in your mind at all times.

Stay Focused Very successful people have one thing in common: they pay attention.

  • By staying focused and paying daily attention to your goals, you increase your chances of attaining them. People who fail often fail because they get side-tracked, lose interest, and lose the focus necessary to maintain the intensity of their purpose.
  • It takes determination and hard work to get anything worthwhile. You won’t be able to keep your resolutions if you don’t lock in on them.

Take Charge of Yourself Basically, success in anything boils down to taking charge of yourself. You are your own worst enemy—slacking, procrastinating, or giving up contribute to our failures more than what others do or don’t do.

  • So get accountable to yourself, by following through and monitoring yourself, as I’ve already discussed.
  • Get organized, whether with more files on your PC, a PDA, or just making lists. Inventory your life and get rid of everything—material and intangible—that stands in the way of achieving your goals. Perhaps it’s “friends” who waste your time and money or activities that do the same. Rather than go to the bar with your buddies, stay home and study or practice a skill.
  • Get self-directed in your learning by first envisioning the person you want to be. Visualize your “ideal” self and think about what you need to be do to become that self. Who are you now? What traits do you have or lack that can help or hinder you from becoming who you want to be?
  • Face it: very few people give a damn about you and your life but you. If you’re going to succeed, only you can make it happen.

Find a New Job? So what resolutions will you be making? According to Monster.com, an unbelievable 93% of the people who responded to their poll will be looking for a new job in 2006. If that’s your situation, you may need to prepare for that job search.

Improve Your Skills and Knowledge In order to get that new job, one resolution should definitely be to learn something new.

  • Whatever you do, try to keep growing at it and getting better, living on the learning curve as a way of sharpening your competitive edge. Try learning how to create your own website, or learn to speak a new language, take a course in management, or enroll in a technical program.
  • The more you know the more profitable and marketable you are in today’s work force.

Improve Your Current Job If you decide to stay on your current job, think of how you can make it better. These resolutions are practical and can actually work.

  • If you work in an office, try refurbishing your cubicle. Surround yourself with things you like: family pictures, decorations that mean something to you, a new throw rug. Maybe they’ll help improve your attitude.
  • What will improve your life even more is to manage your time more effectively. Time and space are the two eternal verities: increase either or both and you can’t help but feel better and be more productive.
  • Again, that means taking stock of yourself, your life, and everything in you and it. Keep a record of how you spend your time every day. Get tough with yourself. Are there any things, any activities you can eliminate or at least reduce?
  • Simplify. Unclutter your life and you’ll have more life to live.

Get in Shape Okay, I know, this is the same old resolution most people make, but this time think of the ramifications that being in shape has upon other areas of your life. You’ll do better at work, for instance, with more energy and a better self-esteem. You’ll have better relationships and live longer. You want to live longer, don’t you?

  • It’s really rather simple: most of the people who live longer, more active lives do so because they’re in better physical shape. Start by eating a bit less, rooting out the fat from your diet, and getting more exercise. Take the stairs. Ride a bike. Play tennis, jog, get in an aerobics class, join a gym. Get off the couch and go for a walk.
  • It’s your only body; take care of it and it’ll take care of you.

Practice Work/Life Balance Your work is important, but you have to have a life outside of your job. Try working a bit less and exercising a bit more. Maybe if you get organized and manage your time better as we discussed earlier, you’ll be just as productive or even more so on fewer hours, thus leaving you that extra time to get in shape or spend more time with the family. If you get your life in better balance, it will have reciprocal benefits, such as making you happier, for instance, and being happier leads to more productivity when you are at work.

Give More, Take Less Our natural impulse as biological creatures is to take, take, take, to be selfish and self-centered. But that impulse only results in a life unworthy of living. You think you’re happy when taking and getting—whether material things or someone’s attention or time—but it actually eats away at your center, your heart, your soul, if you will. When you live your life for others—giving, helping, offering your time and love—you yourself benefit. You cannot do something nice for someone without that act of kindness and generosity coming back to benefit you as well. This resolution could very well be the most important one of all: start living more for others rather than for yourself.

And oh, by the way, if you do keep these resolutions, you’ll have a Happy New Year!



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