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  • Did you set a New Year’s Resolution for yourself?

  • How's that going?

  • I don't know when in the year you're watching,

  • but if I had to bet on the status of your resolution,

  • it's probably not flourishing, but failed or foregone.

  • This is usually what the effort curve on resolutions looks like.

  • If New Year’s is new to you, youre forgiven for not knowing.

  • But come on, this isn't your first Resolution Rodeo.

  • You've been here before: saddled up to a resolution.

  • Gotten thrown off in short order.

  • Only to come back next year to pick a buck of a different color.

  • Or worse, the same.

  • Riding, rolling, retreating, returning.

  • Year after year after year of your unchanging life

  • until a disappointed reaper calls time.

  • New Year's Resolutions suck.

  • Human behavior change is really hard.

  • And the Resolution Rodeo. This is not the way.

  • Instead, to accomplish what you want out of resolutions,

  • positive life change (but in a better way),

  • allow me to suggest a gentler idea.

  • Give yourself a theme.

  • Instead of setting yourself up to fail with,

  • “I'm going to lose x pounds by next year,”

  • or "I'm going to read one book a week, at least

  • a theme would be something like 'Year of Reading'

  • or 'Year of Health'.

  • Now if that sounds a bit broad, that's the point.

  • For some things, precision matters.

  • For others, it doesn't.

  • And when trying to build yourself into a better version of yourself,

  • exact data points don't matter.

  • All that matters is the trend line.

  • If the trend is going in the right direction, so are you.

  • Just moving a trend from negative to positive is hard enough

  • without defining falling short of a goal as failure.

  • Heck, even just decelerating the negative is a positive.

  • Is there something you want more of in your life?

  • Something you want less of?

  • Well, life is a branching path.

  • And it's the trend of your decisions,

  • some big, but mostly small,

  • that will get you to more or less.

  • Stuck in a queue, what to do?

  • Well, if it's theYear of Reading,’ why not open the book,

  • instead of opening the anything else.

  • That's it: you were at a branch and went one way instead of the other.

  • Having a theme is like creating a friendly bot to follow you on the path,

  • to help notice branches and consider choices with you,

  • reminding you to be a little different in little moments sometimes.

  • An example: one year my theme was 'Novelty.'

  • I felt like things had become too same-y.

  • Rather than resolve: “I'm going to do n new things per t time

  • It was just… ‘Year of Novelty.’

  • So, when it made sense, why not try the new instead of the known?

  • It's theYear of Novelty!’

  • Now, I didn't go crazy, but that time was more novel than normal.

  • Mission accomplished.

  • A good theme can't fail.

  • Because just having a theme-bot along will point out paths

  • you wouldn't have noticed otherwise,

  • which will start to change you.

  • More on that in a moment.

  • In picking a theme, go with something that has a nice broad name

  • for the general direction you want to navigate your life.

  • And it is navigation.

  • The diverging paths of life are hidden under the fog of the future.

  • You can't plan the route and then fail to follow it,

  • because there is no map and unseen obstacles await.

  • At any moment, you are where you are

  • and can only navigate from there.

  • Perhaps you started a 'Year of Health'

  • focused on weight loss or gains,

  • before realizing there's a more foundational problem.

  • You haven't failed, it's still 'Year of Health.’

  • The broadness of a theme allows its meaning to change.

  • You started out wanting to read more books,

  • but maybe as you went on,

  • you realized academic papers are where it's at,

  • or that reading reading just doesn’t work for you

  • and listening reading is the way to go.

  • Youre still on theme.

  • The theme can change because so will you.

  • Having a theme, you will notice paths you didn't before.

  • This gets you to think about your thinking.

  • And thinking about your thinking changes your thinking,

  • which changes who you are.

  • So a broad theme allows its meaning to adapt with you,

  • without the guilt of having failed to meet the goals

  • of a Past You who doesn't exist any more.

  • I did 'Year of Order' for a while,

  • but what 'Order' meant to me at the end

  • was different from the start, and that’s fine.

  • So themes should be broad, directional, but most importantly: resonant.

  • Resonance is a physics phenomenon where,

  • if you have a glass, and tuning forks of different sizes,

  • bringing the right-sized humming tuning fork

  • near the glass makes it hum the same note.

  • Words are tuning forks for the brain.

  • When picking a theme, you're looking for a word or

  • words that cause your brain to vibrate in resonance.

  • I've been talking about themes for years and getting people to try them.

  • Here are some of the words I’ve seen people use.

  • The details of what they mean to anyone don't matter.

  • What matters is if there's something that strikes you.

  • Calls out to your brain.

  • That is resonance.

  • So pick a broad, directional phrase that resonates with you and run with it.

  • Your brain and the theme will make it work.

  • Now if this seems very hippy-dippy-lovey-dovey-huggy-wuggy-fuzzy-wuzzy

  • That's fine. Not all tools need sharp edges.

  • I think of it this way.

  • You should be trying to build a life you want to live,

  • and themes are a fuzzy, high-level, longer term way

  • to navigate your brain at a broad area of change.

  • Smaller, and specific-er are the systems in life you might want to set up,

  • below that are the targets those systems might or might not generate,

  • and at the most concrete and sharp

  • is the action or decision Current You is currently taking.

  • This level of detail is perhaps a story for another time,

  • but creating a theme is the bigger and broader

  • to guide the smaller and shorter.

  • Lastly, you may have noticed the examples were all 'Year of $thing,'

  • but that's mainly because I've been trying to gently introduce you to the idea.

  • Resolutions are a year, why not swap them for a theme instead?

  • But if you're still here, a year is way long.

  • Again, fog of the future.

  • A season is a nice human length of time.

  • In a winter of learning, you can learn a lot,

  • but you do need to get started,

  • because it's also not so long as to feel forever.

  • Nature's clock ticks on reminding you that flowers bloom but briefly,

  • the summer sun will wane,

  • leaves eventually drop,

  • snow falls and snow melts,

  • and flowers bloom but briefly.

  • You can be unchanging through all that,

  • but whenever you are, if you've never had a theme,

  • give yourself time to find one that resonates with you

  • and try it out in the coming season.

  • [birds softly chirping]

Did you set a New Year’s Resolution for yourself?

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