Things to know about me: I'm a work-from-home mom of a 4-year-old girl, and I stopped making New Year's Resolutions at the start of 2020.
The decision to stop making resolutions was a liberating revelation, a surprise to everyone in my closest circle. I was the avid resolution-setter of the group. Every December 31, I'd clutch a planner, a vision board, and a bag of kale, convinced that, on January 1, I could become a new version of myself.
But here's what I started noticing about resolutions before I decided to stop making them:
By the middle of January, I found myself failing nearly every resolution. Still, I was sure to return in December of the following year for another round of "How many ways can I overhaul my entire life?"
I want to be clear: Resolutions are not bad, but they left me feeling like a failure when I didn't achieve them, and they failed to get to the root of what needed to change: the habits I cultivated daily.
Years ago, I walked through severe depression and came out on the other side with a deep reverence for the power of self-discipline. This self-discipline empowers us to make the changes we want to see in our lives.
At the lowest point in my life, I learned the undeniable beauty of small things on repeat: small victories, small changes, small shifts. These moments of joy in the journey and choosing to recognize them keep us going, fueling our motivation and inspiring us to keep pushing forward.
I learned the science behind creating new habits and improving my lifestyle through measurable steps. I started making progress and seeing actual results.
I learned that goals must be tangible and measurable.
I learned that if I wanted to make a serious lifestyle overhaul, I needed to take it one day at a time.
Most importantly, I figured out how to rejoice in the small, finite progress. Without celebration and choosing to partner with yourself, the journey towards self-discipline is so much more challenging.
Motherhood only deepened my understanding of self-discipline, showing me that parenting is about flow, sustainable habits, and family values—not rigid goals and resolutions and often left me feeling like a failure when I didn’t hit the mark.
In my first year of quitting resolutions, I remember sitting down on January 2 (intentionally a little behind everyone else) and writing down some daily, weekly, and monthly rhythms I wanted to incorporate into our lives that year.
The words' rhythms' and 'routines' can be used interchangeably here. Both are patterns you choose to follow regularly; however, the word 'rhythms' accounts for the go-with-the-flow nature we often need in parenthood. In this context, 'rhythms' refer to the intentional and regular patterns of behavior or activities that you incorporate into your daily, weekly, or monthly life to support your goals and values. These rhythms are not rigid like resolutions, but they provide a flexible structure to your life, allowing you to adapt to the ever-changing demands of parenthood and work.
To find my rhythms, I started by getting deeply honest with what I wanted in the year ahead:
From there, I thought about some routines and rhythms I'd want to implement to align with my vision for the year ahead.
If I wanted to be a more present mom, I could start with a daily rhythm of unplugging to do a short activity with my daughter where she had my full presence.
If I wanted to fuel my body and not just run on fumes, I could create a weekly meal-prep day to ensure I always had options in a pinch.
In our home, we set 3 kinds of rhythms, each serving a different purpose and helping us to maintain balance and order in our lives.
Here are the three trusted categories I stand by and some ideas to go with each one:
Whether it’s a quiet morning routine, a weekly family tradition, or a monthly check-in that recalibrates our course, these rhythms have become the threads that hold me and my family together.
Choosing rhythms over resolutions brings more peace than pressure, more growth than guilt. It’s a grace-filled and sustainable way forward. And maybe, just maybe, that’s the secret to making steady progress—one intentional rhythm at a time.
Hannah Howard
Autor