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New Year’s resolutions usually fall by the wayside, but there is a better approach to making real changes

New Year’s resolutions usually fall by the wayside, but there is a better approach to making real changes

  • Research shows that New Year’s resolutions often don’t last due to unrealistic goals, reliance on willpower, and a focus on immediate gratification rather than long-term rewards.
  • Practicing self-compassion by being kind to yourself can significantly improve well-being and lead to better choices in daily life. This involves quieting the inner critic and treating oneself with the same kindness as a friend.
  • Small shifts in gratitude, outward kindness, and mindfulness can have a significant impact on overall well-being. This includes journaling three good things each day, practicing random acts of kindness, and eating mindfully.
  • The practice of mindfulness can also be applied to meal-time and diet by focusing on enjoyment and savoring rather than restriction or judgment. This can lead to a healthier relationship with food and improved overall well-being.
  • By adopting these incremental practices, individuals can make lasting changes that bring about big rewards without relying on willpower or restrictive goals. This approach focuses on connection with oneself and others, leading to improved happiness and overall well-being.

Resolutions often rely on willpower to push through or follow through, but research shows they usually don't work. Guillermo Spelucin Runciman/iStock via Getty Images

How are your New Year’s resolutions going? If you’ve given up on them, you’re not alone.

Every January, people across the world seek a fresh start and set goals for the year to improve their health and quality of life. Dry January and new gym memberships accompany a desire to shake off the stress and holiday pounds.

But research shows that resolutions typically don’t last. As a practicing psychologist and professor of counseling psychology, I have seen many people start off the new year with lofty self-improvement goals, only to become frustrated and give up early into the new year.

This happens so frequently that popular media has even coined the name “Quitter’s Day” for the second Friday in January –when most people have given up on their resolutions.

However, there is a way to continue your self-improvement goals and find success by making changes that offer incremental rewards instead of frustration. My students and clients are consistently surprised by how small actions and practices bring about big rewards. Below are a few manageable and meaningful practices to adopt that can last well after the new year’s motivation fades.

A major reason for failure in New Year’s resolutions is that people set unrealistic goals.

Why don’t resolutions work?

Most New Year’s resolutions tend to be restrictive or rely on willpower, such as eliminating alcohol and sugar from your diet, or exercising every morning.

The problem is that these types of commitments force us to do something we don’t really want to do. And success takes time: It can take more than six weeks before improvements from exercise become apparent.

It comes as no surprise, then, that these goals are often short-lived and unsuccessful in the long term – it is hard to be successful when we are battling ourselves to do things that don’t come naturally, without immediate rewards. In reality, people prefer immediate gratification and simultaneously tend to downplay the benefit of waiting for longer-term rewards.

Be kind – to yourself

We are often much nicer to our friends, and even to strangers, than we are to ourselves.

Kristin Neff, a psychologist and leader in self-compassion research, teaches that by mindfully quieting our inner critic and being as compassionate to ourselves as we would be to a friend, we can significantly improve our well-being.

Research shows that people who practice being their own partner or teammate – rather than an opponent – feel happier and more confident. The rewards from this type of self-compassion can be seen and felt faster than the results of diet and exercise, and can help us make better choices in multiple aspects of our daily lives.

In my personal and professional life, I have seen people succeed most often when they change how they relate to themselves. In other words, instead of being intensely critical of our emotions and what we are thinking, we are able to be gentler with our experience and be more accepting of our own thoughts and feelings. When we receive these emotional rewards, we feel relief and happiness – payoffs that make it far easier to enthusiastically repeat the pattern.

Engaging in this kind of self-compassion also allows us to better cope with stress and our emotions.

Small shifts in gratitude and outward kindness go a long way

Another evidence-based way to improve overall well-being is to focus on the what’s going well for you and what you are grateful for – in the moment, or more broadly, in your life.

Instead of focusing on whether you succeeded on your initial resolutions, try journaling three good things at the end of each day. In doing so, focus less on the big successes – though they count, too – and instead on the small moments you enjoyed, such as the hug from a friend, the quiet moment with coffee or the smile from a stranger.

Practice random acts of kindness to boost mood and well-being. Reach out to a friend you haven’t talked to in a while or buy coffee for a stranger in the coffee shop. These activities provide an emotional boost that can last for hours, if not days.

Making these small shifts can help stave off the stress and guilt that can thwart your self-improvement goals.

Two girls sitting on a bench at school, one reassuring the other,

Acts of kindness provide an emotional boost to both the giver and the recipient.
10’000 Hours/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Mindful eating

The well-known practice of mindfulness encourages paying attention – without judgment – to the present moment.

Research shows that taking time to slow down and savor the moment has substantial physical and psychological benefits, such as lowering stress and improving focus, among others. In fact, mindfulness even has the power to change brain connections, leading to greater control over our emotions.

This approach can also be applied to meal-time and diet, a popular focus of New Year’s resolutions. Using the practice of mindfulness can also help us shift from a judgmental and restrictive view of food to a focus on enjoyment and savoring.

So instead of eliminating certain foods or thinking of foods as either good or bad, slow down and savor your food. This can look like taking a moment to take in what your food looks and smells like, and chewing your food slowly, noticing the taste and texture – like a wine-tasting experience but with your meal.

My clients often tell me how eating more mindfully helped change their relationship with food. One client said that instead of thinking about how much she was eating, she instead experienced how much she liked the taste of her meal and the sense of fullness when she felt she had eaten enough.

So perhaps this year, instead of focusing on willpower or restriction, choose connection with yourself and others instead.

Doing so will improve your happiness and your overall well-being, long after the New Year’s resolutions fade.

The Conversation

Michele Patterson Ford does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. Why do New Year’s resolutions often fail?
A. Resolutions often rely on willpower, which can lead to frustration and failure, as it takes more than six weeks for improvements from exercise to become apparent.

Q. What is a common reason why people give up on their New Year’s resolutions?
A. People set unrealistic goals that force them to do something they don’t really want to do, leading to feelings of guilt and stress.

Q. How can practicing self-compassion improve well-being?
A. By mindfully quieting our inner critic and being as compassionate to ourselves as we would be to a friend, we can significantly improve our well-being and make better choices in multiple aspects of our daily lives.

Q. What is the benefit of focusing on gratitude and outward kindness?
A. Focusing on what’s going well for us and practicing random acts of kindness can provide an emotional boost that can last for hours, if not days, and help stave off stress and guilt.

Q. How can mindfulness improve physical and psychological benefits?
A. Mindfulness has substantial physical and psychological benefits, such as lowering stress and improving focus, and even changes brain connections leading to greater control over our emotions.

Q. What is the benefit of eating mindfully?
A. Eating mindfully can help shift from a judgmental and restrictive view of food to a focus on enjoyment and savoring, leading to a healthier relationship with food.

Q. Why do people struggle with self-improvement goals?
A. People often prefer immediate gratification and downplay the benefit of waiting for longer-term rewards, making it hard to be successful when we are battling ourselves to do things that don’t come naturally.

Q. How can small shifts in gratitude and outward kindness improve overall well-being?
A. Making these small shifts can help stave off stress and guilt that can thwart self-improvement goals, leading to improved happiness and overall well-being.

Q. What is the alternative approach to making New Year’s resolutions?
A. Instead of relying on willpower or restriction, choose connection with yourself and others, focusing on incremental rewards and small actions that bring about big rewards.

Q. How can practicing self-compassion lead to better coping with stress and emotions?
A. By being gentler with our experience and more accepting of our thoughts and feelings, we can feel relief and happiness, making it easier to cope with stress and emotions.