Some wonder the worth of making New Year's Resolutions. They tend to fall by the wayside before the month is out anyway, so why bother?
I'll tell you why - and how to be successful at keeping them. One, putting a resolution down in writing makes it real. Seeing the words helps solidify the thought and desire in your brain. Two, it's also helpful if there aren't too many. You can only work on so much of yourself at one time. To take on too much is to set yourself up for failure.
And third, the more concrete the resolution, the more apt one is to actually make it happen. "Lose weight" is a great resolution - "Lose 20 pounds" might actually happen because you can see yourself moving toward that goal each time you step on the scales. Last year, I made a "lose 20 pounds" resolution in April and 21 weeks later, had accomplished that goal. I set a new one and by Thanksgiving, was down 30 pounds.
So here, written down, are my three VERY concrete goals for 2019 (in no particular order):
- Lose another 30 pounds by September (which will put me at my pre-pregnancy weight).
- Write 100,000 words on The Companion, my fantasy series and Work of My Heart.
- Finish repubbing the last few Ellora's Cave novels by June (I haven't counted them up, but there aren't that many left).
See? Doable!
Play safe - and make sensible resolutions,
Diana
P.S. Okay, so I do have one more...to really keep track of what I read this year. I've successfully done this in the past, so I know I can do it. I just have to remember!
2 comments:
I've kept track of the books I read since 2004. It's interesting to go back and look at the variety of authors.
Lynn
At this point, I'm working through my mom's TBR pile. A while back, I'd attended a library book sale and bought her a number of books by the authors she loved. So right now, it's a lot of Jude Devereaux and Debbie Macomber with the occasional Maeve Binchy thrown in for good measure. Not a lot of variety.
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