By Lisa Manterfield
Lily sent me a wonderful blog post that I wanted to share with you as we go into the New Year. It begins with this quote:
“We spend January 1 walking through our lives, room by room, drawing up a list of work to be done, cracks to be patched. Maybe this year, to balance the list, we ought to walk through the rooms of our lives… not looking for flaws, but for potential.”
I really relate to this quote because, in the past, this is exactly how I’ve approached the New Year. I’ve gone room-to-room looking for all the things wrong with me and resolving to fix them in the New Year. Come year-end, I’d look at my goals for the previous January and inevitably find that I’d fallen short, let myself down yet again. So, I’d resolve to do better the next year, to make it the year I improved myself.
I’m not sure whether it’s facing the reality of infertility that’s made me realize there are things about me that just cannot be fixed, or if I’ve just reached an age where I’ve decided to be kinder to myself. Whichever it is, I’ve adopted a new philosophy about New Year’s resolutions.
I no longer resolve to fix my flaws. I’m not going to aim to lose weight or organize my house or try to be more stylish. Nor am I going to compare myself to others—especially women with children—and find myself falling short. I am who I am and, even though I’m far from perfect, I don’t need to be fixed.
Instead I’m looking for ways to tap my potential and be the best version of me I can be. Instead of resolving to be who I’m not, I will try to nurture the best of who I am. I will set goals that point me in the direction I’d like my life to go and not worry about whether the “me” that arrives there is perfect.
As you head into the New Year, will you be making resolutions or setting goals? If so, are you being kind to yourself or are you treating yourself like something that’s broken and needs to be fixed?
Greg says
Great Post and I wish you the best in 2016 and beyond.
For me outside of possibly running my first marathon I’ve set no goals for 2016 other than to enjoy life and where it takes me rather than try to fill voids that cannot be filled. Similar to what you discussed I don’t want to set goals only to be disappointed and get down on myself. I don’t want to plan out my year. I want an open ended year that has many possibilities some of which I didn’t imagine.
Ani says
I stopped trying to make New Year’s Resolutions about 3 years ago,since it just gave me more stress that was completely unnecessary.My only plan for 2016 is to work on my inner peace and learning to accept what I can’t change and can’t control.
Lin says
I think I’m treating myself as something that is a bit broken, but, as one of my favorite quotes say “ring the bells that still can ring, forget your perfect offering, there’s a crack in everything, that’s how the light gets in”.
(Heard in a Leonard Cohen-song, but I don’t know if that’s where it comes from.)
I’m thinking the cracks can also be where my light comes out.