Every year, millions of people take the opportunity to use January 1 as a fresh start.
The ancient Babylonians are recognized as the first people to make New Year’s resolutions, some 4,000 years ago.[1]However, instead of setting goals for themselves, they made promises to the gods, hoping those gods would then ‘bestow favor’ on them for the coming year.
In our home, my husband and I sit down every New Year to set our goals and intentions for the year. When the kids became old enough to participate, they started joining us for this important ritual.
Setting goals is the ‘easy’ part; but we all know that the execution of our resolutions is often easier said than done.
In fact, check out these statistics:
- One widely quoted statistic notes that 92% of people don’t follow through on their resolutions.
- Another showed 80% of people give up on their resolutions by the second week in February.[2]
- A third study identified that 88% of those who set New Year’s Resolutions fail, even though 52% were confident of success at the beginning.[3]
- One identified that 25% of people ditch their goals in the first week![4]
Regardless of which of these studies is right, we can all agree that the overwhelming conclusion is this:
MOST people don’t follow through.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
7 Reasons Why New Year’s Resolutions Fail
Here are 7 reasons why so many New Year’s Resolutions fail and more importantly, how to set yourself up for success in the new year:
1. Your Goals Aren’t Specific Enough
“I want to get healthier”
is a great mission, but not a great goal. The universe responds to specificity and so does your brain.
When things aren’t specific enough, or you don’t have a clear enough vision of what you want, your mind doesn’t know what success looks like, and it’s easier to get distracted, demotivated and lose energy.
Set Yourself up for Success:
Get specific. Make sure you have a clear vision of what you want and what success looks like.
You want to get healthier? What does that mean? Do you want to exercise three times a week? Eat better? What does that look like? No more sugar, meatless Monday, eight fruits and vegetables a day?
You want to lose weight. How much? By when? Get specific on your goals so you know exactly what it would mean to achieve them.
Make your goals SMART: Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, Timely.
2 No Accountability
How much more likely are you to follow through on something when you’ve committed to someone else – your boss, spouse, friends?
The founder at AllTopStartups, Thomas Oppong wrote is well in his article on Medium:[5]
“When you are accountable to someone or a group of people for doing what you said you would do, you can easily get stuff done because you engage the power of social expectations.”
Set Yourself up for Success:
Find an accountability partner. Hire a coach to keep you on track and honest. Make a commitment to someone else.
I have a good friend that joined a “Race for a Cure” team so she was accountable to both the team, the cause and the result.
3. You Lose Focus
Did someone say ‘squirrel!?’ Committing to having a new adventure each month is a great resolution (one of my good friends had this one last year).
In January, you go skydiving,…Awesome! February, you head out on a kayak…Great work! But then things get busy, life gets away from you, and suddenly that exciting resolution finds its way to the back burner of your mind.
I read one statistic that said 23% of people forgot about their resolutions. Forgot!
Set Yourself up for Success:
Write down your resolutions.
Studies have proven that those who write down their goals accomplish significantly more than those who do not. In fact, you are 42 percent more likely to achieve your goals if you write them down. Writing your goals down not only forces you to get clear on what is that you want to accomplish, but doing so plays a part in motivating you to complete the tasks necessary for your success.[6]
Then, place them somewhere you can see them and review them regularly.Place your goal somewhere you see it: your bathroom mirror, your calendar, a reminder on your phone.
My husband and I have date nights throughout the year to check in on our goals and see how we’re progressing. You can also use other ‘milestone events’ such as birthdays, anniversaries and holidays as a time to review your resolutions.
Create a daily ritual around your resolution. My good friend, and owner of HeySoul, Jessie Gardner, talks about making small, consistent, simple, doable actions. Build these into your normal life and make them something you look forward to doing. Your cup of tea in the morning, a comfy meditation pillow, your favorite app. This creates a positive experience and begins to rewire the brain to seek that experience again and again.
“Moments make up your days, days make up your year.” Jessie Gardner, Founder, HeySoul
4 Your Environment Is Not Conducive to Your Goals
In my work as a health coach, this shows up more than any other type of coaching work I do. One of the biggest challenges my clients face is trying to make a change in an environment that is not in sync with the changes they’re trying to make.
For example, you want to stop eating sugar, but your partner stocks the house full of yummy sweet treats. Or, you want to meditate daily, but every time you go to do so, your family laughs at how woo-woo you’ve become. Maybe you’re trying to take less on and learn to say no more often and your partner keeps committing you to every invitation you get. Perhaps you want to walk three times a week, but it’s the winter in England and it’s pouring rain every day.
I had one client who wanted to stop eating in the evenings. However, every night when she went to watch TV with her partner, her partner grabbed a big bag of potato chips or pint of ice cream. Sure, she had willpower, but understandably this was a real struggle and made it much harder to stay disciplined.
Set Yourself up for Success:
Short of ditching your partner, abandoning your family and moving to Hawaii, what can you do when your environment is not conducive to your goals?
First, aim to get your partner or family on board, even with small changes.
Not a chance? Set up systems that allow you to get what you need. Meditate when they’re not home, stock your cupboard full of your favorite teas for when you watch TV. Join the local gym, get an exercise app, purchase a second-hand treadmill.
It’s NOT easy, but there ARE always ways to make it work.
5. You Don’t Really Want It, or You Don’t Know Why It’s Important
We often make resolutions based on what others think we should do or perhaps what we think we should do. But if you don’t really want to do it, the likelihood of success becomes very low. YOU must want to lose the weight, quit smoking, save money. Someone else can’t want it for you. In fact, as humans we have a need for autonomy and freedom, which means if someone tells you should, the likelihood of you doing it becomes even less!
Performance expert and coach, Jay Henderson says this,
“If you set goals based on things that aren’t a priority for you, they’re just not going to happen. But here’s the deal. If you set your goals based on what IS important to you, you probably won’t even need to write them down. You’re going to think about them all the time and they’re just going to happen”
Set Yourself up for Success:
Identify what YOU want and WHY it’s important to you.
6. You Underestimate What It’s Going to Take
Most people underestimate what it’s going to take to make their goals a reality. They get excited about an idea, but the more they see the reality of what it’s really going to take to get there, the more they lose steam.
What happens to your mind when it thinks something is too hard or believes it’s going to take too long? Exactly.
Set Yourself up for Success:
Identify what you need to do to achieve your goal. Goals without actions are just ideas.
Create a plan of action. Better yet, get someone else who has done exactly what you’re trying to do help you.
If you want to lose 10 lbs., how do you plan on losing it? How long might that take? What’s the step-by-step approach? Put pen to paper and figure it out.
Another tip: Keep it simple.
Identify the one thing that will have the most significant impact or make the biggest difference for your life. You don’t need to make eight resolutions. Make one. The one. And commit. Put your energy and focus into making it happen. Small changes eventually add up to huge results.
Take my client Robin. Due to her fibromyalgia, she had such terrible pain in her feet that she couldn’t tolerate anything on her feet other than fuzzy socks. But she had a goal to wear this pair of moccasin slippers out into the world. She started physical therapy, did desensitization work and slowly extended the amount of time in her slippers.
And then one day I got the best email from her:
“…this week is the first time I’ve worn the brown slippers out into the world! I literally started by just keeping my feet in them for 15 seconds, and building from there on days when I thought I could.”
See? Small changes, big results.
7. The Resolution Is out of Sync with Who You Are
Our identity – who we believe ourselves to be – is very powerful. A former colleague of mine tells the story about a client, “Big Dan,” who came to him wanting to lose weight.
Big Dan had a goal to lose 10 kilos, but “Big Dan” was a large man who ran Big Dan’s Meat Shop. His entire identify revolved around his size. Of course, every time he tried to lose weight he didn’t. He saw himself as Big Dan, as did others. In order to lose the weight, he needed to shift his entire identity.– who you are – and how you see yourself.
If you see yourself as athletic and strong, the likelihood of you doing that triathlon are high.
But if you have always seen yourself as nonathletic and clumsy, guess how that’s going to play out? This is not an easy shift, to change your identify. It requires awareness, understanding and some deep work. Often this is work that needs to be done with the support of a good therapist or coach.
But once you switch your perception of yourself, it’s amazing how easily (and quickly) things will happen from there.
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