7 Steps For Making a New Year’s Resolution and Keeping It

20091216-new-year

Are you keen to reinvent yourself in 2010? Or at least use the new year as a long overdue excuse to get rid of bad habits or pick up new ones?

newyearsYes, it’s that time of year again. The time of year when we feel as if we have to turn over a new leaf. The time when we misguidedly imagine that the arrival of a new year will magically provide the catalyst, motivation and persistence we need to reinvent ourselves.

Traditionally, New Year’s Day is styled as the ideal time to kick start a new phase in your life and the time when you must make your all important new year’s resolution. Unfortunately, the beginning of the year is also one of the worst times to make a major change in your habits because it’s often a relatively stressful time, right in the middle of the party and vacation season.

Don’t set yourself up for failure in 2010 by vowing to make huge changes that will be hard to keep. Instead follow these seven steps for successfully making a new year’s resolution you can stick to for good.

1. Just pick one thing

If you want to change your life or your lifestyle don’t try to change the whole thing at once. It won’t work. Instead pick one area of your life to change to begin with.

Make it something concrete so you know exactly what change you’re planning to make. If you’re successful with the first change you can go ahead and make another change after a month or so. By making small changes one after the other, you still have the chance to be a whole new you at the end of 2010 and it’s a much more realistic way of doing it.

Don’t pick a New Year’s resolution that’s bound to fail either, like running a marathon if you’re 40lbs overweight and get out of breath walking upstairs. If that’s the case resolve to walk every day. When you’ve got that habit down pat you can graduate to running in short bursts, constant running by March or April and a marathon at the end of the year. What’s the one habit you most want to change?

2. Plan ahead

To ensure success you need to research the change you’re making and plan ahead so you have the resources available when you need them. Here are a few things you should do to prepare and get all the systems in place ready to make your change.

Read up on it – Go to the library and get books on the subject. Whether it’s quitting smoking, taking up running or yoga or becoming vegan there are books to help you prepare for it. Or use the Internet. If you do enough research you should even be looking forward to making the change.

Plan for success – Get everything ready so things will run smoothly. If you’re taking up running make sure you have the trainers, clothes, hat, glasses, ipod loaded with energetic sounds at the ready. Then there can be no excuses.

3. Anticipate problems

There will be problems so make a list of what they’ll be. If you think about it, you’ll be able to anticipate problems at certain times of the day, with specific people or in special situations. Once you’ve identified the times that will probably be hard work out ways to cope with them when they inevitably crop up.

4. Pick a start date

You don’t have to make these changes on New Year’s Day. That’s the conventional wisdom, but if you truly want to make changes then pick a day when you know you’ll be well-rested, enthusiastic and surrounded by positive people. I’ll be waiting until my kids go back to school in February.

Sometimes picking a date doesn’t work. It’s better to wait until your whole mind and body are fully ready to take on the challenge. You’ll know when it is when the time comes.

5. Go for it

On the big day go for it 100%. Make a commitment and write it down on a card. You just need one short phrase you can carry in your wallet. Or keep it in your car, by your bed and on your bathroom mirror too for an extra dose of positive reinforcement.

Your commitment card will say something like:

  • I enjoy a clean, smoke-free life.
  • I stay calm and in control even under times of stress.
  • I’m committed to learning how to run my own business.
  • I meditate daily.

6. Accept failure

If you do fail and sneak a cigarette, miss a walk or shout at the kids one morning don’t hate yourself for it. Make a note of the triggers that caused this set back and vow to learn a lesson from them.

If you know that alcohol makes you crave cigarettes and oversleep the next day cut back on it. If you know the morning rush before school makes you shout then get up earlier or prepare things the night before to make it easier on you.

Perseverance is the key to success. Try again, keep trying and you will succeed.

7. Plan rewards

Small rewards are great encouragement to keep you going during the hardest first days. After that you can probably reward yourself once a week with a magazine, a long-distance call to a supportive friend, a siesta, a trip to the movies or whatever makes you tick.

Later you can change the rewards to monthly and then at the end of the year you can pick an anniversary reward. Something that you’ll look forward to. You deserve it and you’ll have earned it.

Whatever your plans and goals are for 2010 I’d do wish you luck with them but remember, it’s your life and you make your own luck.

Decide what you want to do in 2010, plan how to get it and go for it. I’ll definitely be cheering you on.

Are you planning to make a New Year’s resolution in 2010? What is it and is it something you’ve tried to do before or something new?

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  • Mojo

    What about don’t wait for New Year with this stuff, if you’re postponing good change you’ll fail keep it up anyway. A week into January it’s the same old routine again and all that fresh energy is gone but you still have your resolutions to deal with.

    Start when you feel your ready to start, be that before or after New Year.

  • http://www.generatorland.com GeneratorBoy

    Great/workable article. I also ran across this one while getting ready for the new year: http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/1290496/how_to_stick_to_your_new_years_resolutions.html?cat=51

  • http://getinthehotspot.com/ Annabel Candy, Dream Life

    Thanks Mojo. So true. When the time’s right and the stars align that’s the time to get started with your new habits. New Years Day or not.

  • http://allwomenstalk.com All Women Stalker

    I no longer believe in New Year’s Resolutions. I think New Month’s Resolutions are more effective. When I fail, I don’t have to wait for the next year to start over again. I guess I could also try renewing goals and resolutions every months if I haven’t achieved them yet.

    -Denise

  • http://guvenevdenevetasimacilik.com/ Bursa evden eve

    What about don’t wait for New Year with this stuff, if you’re postponing good change you’ll fail keep it up anyway.

  • http://www.prayerthegate.com Erin

    I love the idea of getting a head start and not procrastinating until January 1. Some sound tips and guidance, Annabel.

  • http://getinthehotspot.com/ Annabel Candy, Dream Life

    Denise, Bursa – Thanks ladies:) Yes, we have to keep progressing with out resolutions throughout the year. Life’s definitely too short to only try to change our habits on new year’s eve!
    Erin – Nothing really happens overnight does it? It often looks that way to other people but most people who find success at anything have been working on it for a while!

  • http://www.bigandboldcoaching.com Dave

    I love the picture, Annabel, especially the flower, very playful.

    Great article. I look forward to more in the new year.

  • http://www.getinthehotspot.com/ Annabel Candy, Get In the Hot Spot

    Thanks Dave. It took me a while to realise you were talking about the photo of me! It was taken on my wedding day in Vanuatu, a stunning archipelago of islands in the South Pacific, about 4 years ago. I look even better now though and hope to keep playing and having fun no matter how old I get:)

  • http://www.highinterestsavingsaccount.com.au High Internet Savings Account

    I think no. 7 is most appropriate new year resolution ti plan reward someone. Thanks,

  • http://calmgrowth.com/ Marko @ calmgrowth

    Great list!

    I especially like, and I think that is a very important number 6. Fear of making mistakes is a worse thing than mistakes themselves!

    I personally would like added>
    1. Have fun while you work on creating the kind of life you want.
    2. Be calm while working on the goals, do not let the negative emotions blocking you.
    3. Accept your imperfections.

  • http://www.cogiterium.typepad.com Cogiterium

    I usually pick too many goals to work on at once. I agree that focusing your thoughts and energy on one resolution at a time is best. My goal right now is to lose 15 lbs. in 30 days.

  • http://rob-thompson.com Rob

    Monday 24 January is the day when you’ll most likely break a resolution due to this formula:

    1/8W+(D-d) 3/8xTQ MxNA.

    Where:
    - W: Weather
    - D: Debt
    - d: Money due in January pay
    - T: Time since Christmas
    - Q: Time since failed quit attempt
    - M: General motivational levels
    - NA: The need to take action

    http://tinyurl.com/5hvx4

  • http://www.getinthehotspot.com/ Annabel Candy, Get In the Hot Spot

    Marko – Great additions, thanks.

    Cogiterium – I’m not a weight loss expert but it seems to be generally agreed that sensible weight loss is about 2lb a week. So it you want to lose 15lbs that should take about 7 weeks. Slow but steady. However you do it it will be hard and a huge achievement. It sounds as if you’re determined to succeed and I wish you luck.

    Rob – Hehe, I like this formula. Not being much of a mathemetician I have to go with my gut and say I’d have thought caving in on your resolutions came a bit earlier. Maybe around the end of the first week! That’s why it’s important to strategise ways to stay motivated during moments of weakness and also not let one slip up work as an excuse for giving up altogether.

  • http://budurl.com/79e2 Teresa

    Thank you for sharing these 7 tips! Picking just one resolution to focus on is hard, but it makes more sense than trying to keep them all at the same time. After all, once I believe I’m progressing nicely with the first, I could always add another into the mix. :-D

    Planning ahead, anticipating problems and picking my own comfortable starting date will definitely help prepare me for whatever surprises and hiccups lie ahead. Going for it, accepting failure and incorporating a reward system will also help make it more tangible for me. I could stop hesitating and just go for it. If I fail, I could always try again, but I will definitely reward myself with brief respites to add more fun and color to the process.

    Visit http://www.makemorelivemoregivemore.com to read stories and tips on how you could make more, live more and give more and live a more balanced life in 2010.

  • http://celestinechua.com/ Celes | The Personal Excellence Blog

    Hey Annabel! Love your avatar picture – you look lovely, with the flower and all!

    I like your 7 steps, especially the step on planning ahead. Most new year resolutions never materialized cause they weren’t put into a plan of sorts. People continue on their life on autopilot when they don’t plan ahead, which unfortunately leads to the same results from before.

    On a related note, I just compiled a list of 58 noteworthy new year resolutions. LifeHack readers who are looking for ideas/inspiration on new year’s resolutions can check it out here: http://celestinechua.com/blog/2009/12/58-noteworthy-resolutions-for-the-new-year/

  • http://Www.gentlechiro.com Dennis

    I have heard of also giving yourself an aweful punishment if you don’t reach the goal. Which might actually be more motivating than the gift.

    Like I would really hate to have to clean the garage if I did not follow through with my new years resolution.

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  • Sav

    This is a really neat (and useful) article, but I don’t have anything constructive to say about its contents. I would just like to report a glitch; when I first opened this article, there were no pictures and only one paragraph (introductory). However, when I opened the comments page, the full article was there. This glitch has also ocurred for the article labelled ‘Ten Things Children Really Want From Their Parents’, although I don’t know if opening the comments page works for that.

  • http://www.getinthehotspot.com/ Annabel Candy, Get In the Hot Spot

    Happy new year everyone! Let’s make it a fun and productive one:) Look forward to seeing how things develop for you over the year to come and sharing your adventures.

  • http://rob-thompson.com Rob

    The key to effective New Years resolutions are:

    1. Be focused: focus your energy and enthusiasm on completing one resolution at a time
    2. Be organised: plan to complete the easy resolutions first, pick the low hanging fruit; this gives you confidence and boosts your ability to go onto tackle the more difficult resolutions
    3. Be flexible: sometimes things won’t go as planned, don’t be demodulated
    4. Be specific: use SMART goals; create a concrete action plan use proven habit techniques.

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  • http://www.mylifepassport.com Alexandra

    Great post that I think is really helpful for sticking with New Years Resolutions.

    I personally think that #6 is extremely important. I am often the type of person who will make a resolution, but as soon as I slip up in the slightest bit, it all spirals out of control very quickly.

    We’re all humans and will make mistakes and need new bursts of motivation and I think it’s important that we come to terms with it and accept it!

  • http://www.blackbeltguide.com Marc | Black Belt Guide

    Anabel (love the flower) – I am not big on resolutions, but here is what I have found works for behavioral change:

    1. Be serious about the goal. You can have more than one, but just make sure the change is something you really want.

    2. Write the goal down on a daily basis.

    3. They will be elements to getting to the goal you should attempt to complete everyday. Consider those “tasks” and right those down where you can see them. Cross them off the list when you complete them or carry them over to the next day.

    4. Try to categorize goals (e.g. fitness, learning something new, wealth building, etc…) and attempt no more than one per category and no more than 3 to 4 at any one time.

    5. Review progress (in writing) daily. If something continually does not get done it wasn’t important enough to you to change so drop it.

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  • http://bignews.sexerlv.info Roko

    Nice !!! Thanks Mojo !!!

  • http://www.aspiredtechie.com Sagar Gholap

    Wonderful writeup!
    Hope fully this new year I haven’t broke my resolutions. The last line was like a plus for me – “Its your life, you make up your own luck”

  • http://www.detective.ro detectiv particular

    I no longer believe in New Year's Resolutions. I think New Month's Resolutions are more effective. When I fail, I don't have to wait for the next year to start over again. I guess I could also try renewing goals and resolutions every months if I haven't achieved them yet.