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A Better New Year's Resolution Redux

by Charles H. Green on Monday, December 31, 2007 (post #229)

Some of you recall a blog post I wrote last year on New Year’s resolutions. Frankly, it was good. And frankly I haven’t been able to write a better one. Next year, maybe.
So, apologies to those who read it last year—though I suspect some of you won’t mind.

Happy New Year.
——————————————-
My unscientific sampling says many people make New Years resolutions, and few follow through. Net result—unhappiness.

It doesn’t have to be that way.

You could, of course, just try harder, stiffen your resolve, etc. But you’ve been there, tried that.

You could also ditch the whole idea and just stop making resolutions. Avoid goal-failure by eliminating goal-setting. Effective, but at the cost of giving up on aspirations.

I heard another idea: replace the New Year’s Resolution List with a New Year’s Gratitude List. Here’s why it makes sense.

First, most resolutions are about self-improvement—this year I resolve to: quit smoking, lose weight, cut the gossip, drink less, exercise more, and so on. All those resolutions are rooted in a dissatisfaction with the current state of affairs—or with oneself.

In other words: resolutions often have a component of dissatisfaction with self. For many, it isn’t just dissatisfaction—it’s self-hatred. And the stronger the loathing of self, the stronger the resolutions—and the more they hurt when they go unfulfilled.  It can be a very vicious circle.

Second, happy people do better. This has some verification in science, and it’s a common point of view in religion and psychology—and in common sense. People who are slightly optimistic do better in life. People who are happy are more attractive to other people. In a very real sense, you empower what you fear—and attract what you put out.

Ergo, replace resolutions with gratitude. The best way to improve oneself is paradoxical—start by begin grateful for what you already have. That turns your aspirations from negative (fixing a bad situation) to positive (making a fine situation even better).

Gratitude forces our attention outwards, to others—a common recommendation of almost all spiritual programs.

Finally, gratitude calms us. We worry less. We don’t obsess. We attract others by our calm, which makes our lives connected and meaningful. And before long, we tend to smoke less, drink less, exercise more, gossip less, and so on. Which of course is what we thought we wanted in the first place.

But the real truth is—it wasn’t the resolutions we wanted in the first place.  It was the peace that comes with gratitude.  We mistook cause for effect.

Go for an attitude of gratitude. The rest are positive side-effects.

Over 12,000 people have taken our Trust Quotient quiz. Check out the NEW VERSION and learn your Trust Temperament.

Charles H. Green is founder and CEO of Trusted Advisor Associates LLC; read more about Charlie at http://trustedadvisor.com/cgreen/

You can follow him on twitter @CharlesHGreen

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posted in Trust in Leadership Development and Strategy

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» paradoxical, A Better New Year's Resolution Redux

Bookmarked your post over at Blog Bookmarker.com!

» Slow Down Fast Today!, Personal Development & Happiness Carnival #24

I’m filling in this week as host of the Personal Development and Happiness Carnival. Regular host Alex Blackwell of The Next 45 Years is off on a work-related trip to Florida, but he’ll be back next week. Welcome to the 24th issue of the...

» Harold Jarche, New Year’s Gratitude

Charles Green at Trust Matters suggests a new year's gratitude list instead of a bunch of resolutions that we probably won’t keep. Great idea, as I never really tried to make resolutions anyway.


3 Comments

Michael Barnes said

It's a great read, even more so the second time around.  Thanks for sending, and reminding me that peace = wanting what I have, not having what I want!

posted on Monday, December 31, 2007

Derek Wall said

http://another-green-world.blogspot.com/2008/01/green-new-year-resolutions.html

My trick is to find some resolutions which are good for the environment and good for me and fun, cooking more and growing more is a good start

posted on Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Barb said

I really enjoyed this post! I just finished reading a great book called The Go-Giver, which teaches you to focus on generosity and the spirit of giving in business. I've never been one to make resolutions (because I know they typically don't work), but your idea to focus on gratitude really resonated with me, especially after reading the book...

posted on Friday, January 4, 2008



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