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Resolving the New Year’s Resolution

Resolving the New Year’s Resolution

So we’ve reached another year and you may be wondering about your New Year’s resolution. What does it mean to resolve ourselves to something? What if we later decide it’s a bad idea?

How can we possibly decide to put ourselves on the hook for something? Particularly for a wandering mind, a mind that seems so deeply embedded in the Now, how can we make a promise?

How can we be kind to our Future Self when burdening them with some decisions of Past Self has rarely gone well?

How can we honor our Past Self, if they have given us something onerous?

Do those who resolve do so through “willpower”? If I read the room right, willpower seems to be defined as the ability to not only suppress emotion in service of something deemed “important”, but also act despite that suppression.

In other words, a person with willpower can summon will to fight the nature within themselves.

But somehow I find that just about every endeavor goes better when I guide the elements within rather than fight them. Maybe the work is less about a fight so much as it is in recognizing the emotional winds and waters of Present Self and setting sails accordingly.

Rather than consider ways to further enslave ourselves to a Past Self, why not consider what could better support our agency in the moment?

In this way, instead of focusing on working out an hour a day or something similar, we might instead focus on what small thing might make it easier to make it to the gym? The same principle applies just about everywhere.

– Kourosh

PS What small thing can you do that might make something important to you easier to get to or do?

What is Productivity?

Productivity is many things. For some, it is about doing a lot in a little time.
But, truly, productivity is so much more. It is about:

  • Setting yourself up for success.
  • Being focused where you want to be.
  • Doing things that you find meaningful.
  • Being creative, sometimes even in harsh environments.
  • Forging your own paths.
  • Finding your voice and delivering it well.
  • Knowing and actively deciding on your obligations.
  • Knowing where and how to say “no”.
  • Avoiding procrastination.

Too often, many of us fall into just going along with and fighting whatever the world throws at us. “Go with the flow!”, we say. Meanwhile, we might think, “I’d like to do that one thing. Maybe one day I will.” The days go by. The goal never arrives, and then we wonder why or blame circumstance.

But when we learn to take charge of our lives and the world
around us, we start living life with intention.

“I should do that,” becomes “This is how I start”. Deliberately forging a path to our goals and dreams, we figure out what we want in life and then start taking steps there.

Of course, striking out may seem scary. It takes courage to live life with purpose and on purpose. Roadblocks and worries, fears and concerns show up everywhere.

This is my passion. I want to help you to find that sense of your own unique play to meet the world so that you can:

  • Create a life that is yours.
  • Find and follow an inner guide in a way that works for you and those you care for.
  • Decide on your obligations and meet them while building the world you want.

Productivity Journal

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These products use or are based on Getting Things Done® or GTD® Principles. They are not affiliated with, approved or endorsed by David Allen or the David Allen Company, which is the creator of the Getting Things Done® system for personal productivity. GTD® and Getting Things Done® are registered trademarks of the David Allen Company For more information on the David Allen Company’s products the user may visit their website at www.davidco.com.

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