Any New Years Resolutions (NYR) or Don't You Make Them?

My resolution is to loose weight and get a haircut.

I facilitate workshops on healthy living and each week we have people make an action plan for something they want to achieve. Losing weight would not be accepted, because we have not see you losing weight. You would have to name what you are going to do, to lose that weight, such as stop eating bread, or walk a mile 3 days a week.

An action plan includes what you will do, when you will do it,
how often you will do it. Losing weight then is the result of your action plan. Do you want to try making an action plan to achieve your goal?

For getting a hair cut, in the workshop, the action plan would go like this... say "get my hair cut" and then, what day you will do that. For a haircut, instead of how often, you might say how much hair will be cut off. Or you might say Wednesday I will call for an appointment.

This can sound annoying to many people but it works almost like magic. Action plans usually result in getting this done. Sometimes they do not. A person may find walking is not a good idea, so the facilitator will ask, how do you want to change the action plan so it will work for you?
Perhaps you want to go to a gym and use a treadmill instead?
 

I facilitate workshops on healthy living and each week we have people make an action plan for something they want to achieve. Losing weight would not be accepted, because we have not see you losing weight. You would have to name what you are going to do, to lose that weight, such as stop eating bread, or walk a mile 3 days a week.

An action plan includes what you will do, when you will do it,
how often you will do it. Losing weight then is the result of your action plan. Do you want to try making an action plan to achieve your goal?

For getting a hair cut, in the workshop, the action plan would go like this... say "get my hair cut" and then, what day you will do that. For a haircut, instead of how often, you might say how much hair will be cut off. Or you might say Wednesday I will call for an appointment.

This can sound annoying to many people but it works almost like magic. Action plans usually result in getting this done. Sometimes they do not. A person may find walking is not a good idea, so the facilitator will ask, how do you want to change the action plan so it will work for you?
Perhaps you want to go to a gym and use a treadmill instead?
wow.... do people pay for these workshops? seems a bit like being treated as a child.
 
Another thread here got me thinking about what NYR I need to make. It is procrastinating. I never used to procrastinate but now I am a huge procrastinator. I say I'm going to do this, that, and the other thing but don't do it. Perhaps I'll make a list of what I've been procrastinating to remind myself of what I really need to do==there are some very important things I need to do and stop putting off. So there you have it.
 
Another thread here got me thinking about what NYR I need to make. It is procrastinating. I never used to procrastinate but now I am a huge procrastinator. I say I'm going to do this, that, and the other thing but don't do it. Perhaps I'll make a list of what I've been procrastinating to remind myself of what I really need to do==there are some very important things I need to do and stop putting off. So there you have it.
My husband has spent a lifetime procrastinating. he could teach a class on the subject; only, you know, he never would because, you know, he would procrastinate 😏
 
Although I haven't done any New Year's Resolutions, I have made lists. And lists do work for me. Once it is written down, it's like a contract. I give myself dates to finish it, and then cross it off as I move to the next item on the list. In the old days, I would make lists that filled a whole page. Not anymore. Now, I just write on my desk top calendar the appointment dates and any major tasks. The little tasks get stored in my head. They all eventually get done, but not as quickly as before. :)
 
The New Year's Resolutions that are easy to keep..

• Rediscover the joy in every day life.

• Nurture your health - mind, body and spirit.
I do those things daily and I am so thankful it is mostly habit now. I am really terrible at exercising on land, and when my dog died, I stopped walking, but I had promised myself to go to a pool when he died. I love being in the water and when covid resulted in weight gain and the pools finally reopened, I committed to going to the pool 5 days a week. This is working for me. A commitment to exercising on land does not. It is really important we choose things we want to do.

My legs give me a lot of trouble, and I am afraid if I stopped going to the pool, my legs would get worse. That is the stick that gets me to the pool. The hot tub is the carrot. :D
 
Another thread here got me thinking about what NYR I need to make. It is procrastinating. I never used to procrastinate but now I am a huge procrastinator. I say I'm going to do this, that, and the other thing but don't do it. Perhaps I'll make a list of what I've been procrastinating to remind myself of what I really need to do==there are some very important things I need to do and stop putting off. So there you have it.
Wow, that sounds like an excellent idea! I have to remember that so the next time I do a workshop on healthy living I can suggest that would be a good action plan, just write it down. That might be the best action plan ever because hopefully, it would help people be mindful. If people fail it is usually because they are not mindful. When they fail, I feel like I failed, so I am very excited about the idea.
 
I hereby vow, never, ever to sing that song, 'If I had You' to any future ladyfriends, because my last ladyfriend, when I sang the words..........

"I could climb the very highest mountain

Or I could sail the mighty ocean wide
I could also cross the burnin' desert

If I had you by my side."

She promptly said, "If you had me by your side, if you had me by your side, bugger that, you can go on your own, Tim, I'm not going with you?"

She had a cruel mouth that one. 😊 ;)
 
wow.... do people pay for these workshops? seems a bit like being treated as a child.

Hum, that is an interesting reply. No, they do not pay for the workshops. They have health problems. It is federally funded and managed by Stanford. You know the college. My concern was Standford is a little too intellectual elitist for the common person.

It is kind of a cross of a college class and guided a peer support group, because people who live with health problems, learn to live with them and when we all get together we learn from each other. This is a quality of health care that medical professionals just can't provide. Book learning is not equal to living with a problem.

We do workshops on living with chronic conditions, living with chronic pain, and living with diabetes. It is sharing personal experiences that make the workshops so great because that is where the real information for living with a problem comes from, the people who live with it. I love the way people transition from feeling pretty negative to being confident and feeling supported.
 
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I hereby vow, never, ever to sing that song, 'If I had You' to any future ladyfriends, because my last ladyfriend, when I sang the words..........

"I could climb the very highest mountain

Or I could sail the mighty ocean wide
I could also cross the burnin' desert

If I had you by my side."

She promptly said, "If you had me by your side, if you had me by your side, bugger that, you can go on your own, Tim, I'm not going with you?"

She had a cruel mouth that one. 😊 ;)
How about a game of Scrabble? I am not into the adventures you mentioned. However, I am looking for someone to take me to the annual Steam Engine Festival. That is so awesome! They even have a steam-powered mill for cutting logs into timber and the transition of plows into tanks. I love history!
 
The intellectual elitist college is called Stanford.
:ROFLMAO: and I obviously am not one of them. I would thank you for the correction but I am afraid it will not stick. My head is sort 1960 hippy flower child and not real good at details. Years ago when I asked my doctor if I have Alzheimer's disease, he laughed and said no, it is just my personality.

Hey, I could correct my error. Thanks.
 
:ROFLMAO: and I obviously am not one of them. I would thank you for the correction but I am afraid it will not stick. My head is sort 1960 hippy flower child and not real good at details. Years ago when I asked my doctor if I have Alzheimer's disease, he laughed and said no, it is just my personality.

Hey, I could correct my error. Thanks.
I like you.
 
Just saw a psychiatrist on TV..and she said if you WERE going to make NYRs...
They should be SMART ones...
Sensible
Memorable
Achievable
Reasonable
Timely

Good Luck!
 
I used to try making resolutions but they always went out the window by the end of January .
Maybe the first one should have been to 'keep all the others' ?? But it wouldn't have been much
good if I didn't keep that one first.
 
I find it really interesting that almost no one who's responded makes New Year's Resolutions! Interesting, because *I* do, and it appears I'm in the teeny tiny minority.

I love the idea of New Year's resolutions because to me it feels like a re-set, a start-from-scratch, a hit-the-rewind button and the things that I didn't do well with or want to improve on, on want to start. It sort of reboots me, and gives me personal goals to strive for, sets goals for the future, focuses my attention on what's in front of me instead of what I'm leaving behind.

And I love all that!
 


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