Great article! It is so important to commit to solving problems in life. That commitment depends so heavily on our potential to focus on what we can actually handle! Many of us must choose to get HONEST with ourselves before we actually take on our challenges.
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The New Year Plan: Are you READY?
Old habits cling to us like steam on a mirror and even when we try to wipe them away, the process is not always easy.
The New Year means different things to different people. For some, it inspires change for the better, for others it’s just another year, and the rest of us fall somewhere in between.
For the inspired, great successes will ensue. For the pseudo-inspired, great intentions will ensue for about 30 days instead of 365. Nevertheless, they TRIED and that counts for something, right?
Sometimes our resolution passion masks our tendency to procrastinate. When you couldn’t button your pants in May, hated your job in June, realized you’re missing important family time in July, smoked too much in August, drank too much in September, or recognized you were in an unfulfilling relationship in October…why are you waiting until January 1st to change?
Do we unconsciously put self-improvement on pause throughout the year, waiting for the right time or right inspiration to press play? Is this the reason we don’t fix problems when they’re identified? Are we hoping for inspiration on New Year’s Day, our birthday, or even through a crisis ─ not realizing that the occasion doesn’t matter if we aren’t ready? Change doesn’t start when you identify the problem. It starts when you decide you’re ready to change. Change is hard, but deferred change can be overwhelming, even when you have motivation:
A workaholic friend was diagnosed with cancer; it was caught early and he had a great prognosis. He told me his initial reaction to hearing “cancer” was fear of not being here to watch his young children grow up. I said, aren’t you doing that now since you work about 100 hours a week? He responded “point-taken.” For years, his workaholic habits were an issue with his family and friends, but he didn’t change. After he was successfully treated and returned to work, he was home by dinner for the first 18 months. But as time went on, he began to backslide to his old ways. Even so, when his family complains, he now listens and immediately corrects himself. He continues to struggle from time to time, but he makes a concerted effort every day to do better. Like most of us, he’s a work in progress.
Change is a struggle. There is a song that says “Falling in love can be easy, but staying in love is too tricky.” The same goes for trying to change…identifying the need to change can be easy, but changing is very tricky.
In our current “microwave” culture where we are expected to fast track everything from success to the grieving process coupled with being electronically leashed to our jobs, we are challenged more. These two factors may constrain our downtime to the point that quick results are more relatable. But sometimes we have to resist that urge, keep it simple, and literally take it one hour, one day and one challenge at a time until we just do better. Old habits cling to us like steam on a mirror and even when we try to wipe them away, the process is not always easy. So what do we do? Realize it’s a process that takes commitment, time, patience, and resilience when we backslide…and not a microwave fix.
So if you plan to be a new you in the New Year, just remember if you are a long ways from where you need to be, it may take you a while to gain lasting results. So while you are on your way, focus on doing better every day until you get there.
Learn more about the author, Gwendolyn Ward.
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Posted by Gwendolyn Ward, Leesburg, Virginia |
Jan 18, 2011 Thanks Zerena and agree! One of my favorite quotes...It all starts and ends with YOU. No matter where you go, there YOU are :-)




