Photo by Andrik Langfield on Unsplash |
Happy belated New Year! I’m mostly back from my extended break after a productive, in-depth review of 2023.
As I wrote in December’s Happy Little Thoughts, I did not
accomplish many personal or professional goals in 2023. I spent most of the
year navigating grief and the practical and administrative matters related to
two deaths, and it was all I could do to keep my own life somewhat functional. When
I wasn’t doing those things, I was mentally and emotionally recovering from
doing them.
But now things are starting to settle down*. Starting a new
year feels like starting fresh.
Choosing a word of the year
As usual, I have been pondering the choice of a word of the
year. I would like 2024 to be, as professional sports teams call it, “a
rebuilding year.” Now that I’m no longer responsible for caring for my
mother-in-law, I can begin to think again of what I want to accomplish.
I toyed with the idea of rebuild as a word of the
year, but it didn’t feel quite right. My circumstances have changed. My dreams have
changed. My tolerance levels for some things have changed. I’m staring down a
milestone birthday. Instead of rebuilding what I had before, as great as
it was, I want to build a life I love, one that makes me happy to wake
up in the morning, on the foundation of my old life. If that makes sense.
Here’s the quote, from Jamie Varon, that inspired me to
choose build as my word of the year:
“Imagine the woman you want to be. Think of what her daily life,
her habits, and routines would be. Start showing up to those habits and
routines, start building them, step by step, and day by day. You don’t become
her like magic. You build her. Start building.”
Words of support
Knowing that I am still somewhat shaky emotionally
(especially considering what’s been going on with Tank—see * below), I’m
choosing a couple of “background” words to support build: restore, gentle. At
least right now, I’m not up for any major disruptive changes. I am up
for building small habits, little by little, gently, while allowing time for
restoration.
After I wrote down some big goals I want to achieve in 2024,
I broke them down into smaller goals, sometimes into something I can achieve in
a month. Some of these subgoals are process goals, like “work on [insert project
here] 15 minutes 3 times a week.” January has been kind of a trial run, as I
figure out how to build the habits I want.
Some fun supportive practices
Thinking about choosing your own word of the year? That’s
only the first step. While you can leave it to chance, if you want to make the
most of the practice of choosing a word of the year, it helps to keep that word
uppermost in your mind. Here are a few supportive practices I’ve heard about and might
try this year:
- Keep a notebook to record ways your word of the year has shown up in your life
- Create a Pinterest board for your word of the year
- Create a vision board focusing on your word of the year
- Put your word of the year on sticky notes and post them in strategic places.
What feels different?
I feel a certain determination I haven’t felt before. A few
of my goals have migrated from year to year without my making any real headway
on them and I want that to stop. I feel more likely to look for solutions and work arounds when I hit a
roadblock, rather than giving up at the first significant obstacle. One lesson
I learned from losing my mom and mother-in-law is that you don’t have
all the time in the world. If you want to do it, do it. Do not keep putting off
things that are important to you. Build the life you want now.
Do you choose a word of the year? If you’d like to share,
please do in the comments below!
Read about past words of the year here, here, and here.
*Last week, my horse, Tank, developed some kind of serious
mystery ailment and for the past week I’ve been alternating between hope and despair.
As I write this post, he is doing better and I’m cautiously optimistic that he’ll
pull through. He’s due to come home from the vet hospital tomorrow.