It’s New Year’s Eve Eve, and as I look back at last year’s resolutions I realize I still have two days to:
OK. I didn’t set those New Year’s resolutions for 2025, but I would have been pleased if any of those outcomes had happened. At times, I have set rubbish goals with this magical, mental-mirage thought process, which can lead to last-minute distress, and despondency. I have empirical evidence that “ wishin’ an’ hopin’” doesn’t work.
I did achieve one goal this year. I published my second book. No, it hasn’t sold 10,000 copies, (yet -😉), but some people have left encouraging reviews.
So what is the difference between resolutions that succeed and those that re-emerge next January providing – “oops” embarrassment ? Some of it is the goal itself.
Perhaps by now, we all know about setting S.M.A.R.T. goals. A goal must be:
S.M.A.R.T. is about the characteristics of the goal. If I am serious about New Year’s resolutions, I should be clear about WHY I am setting this goal.
If I am setting a goal in order to impress someone else, or compete with someone, I am likely to set a Big, Hairy, Audacious, Goal, a “stretch” goal that seems impossible, one where if I got halfway there I’d still feel good. When Jim Collins coined the BHAG, he was encouraging executive change teams to be bold. Individuals, like me should, reread Achievable above. Competition spurs one on to achieve, if the contestants are equally capable and the goals fair and achievements are visible to all.
Psychologist Dr. David McClelland’s research into achievement motivation showed that people who achieved goals tended to set a series of incremental goals that they could definitely make. The “stretch” came over all levels, not one single goal.
Be careful about setting personal goals that depend upon other people for their achievement. “Spend more time with family?” I’m retired and my kids are spread around the country, work demanding jobs and have little children of their own; I might have to include my family in the goal-setting process. Selling 10,000 books depends on reaching many more than 10,000 people and convincing some to buy.
When I quit smoking years ago, I informed everyone I knew, motivated by avoiding the public embarrassment of failing to quit. I weaned myself from cigarettes to cigars, which lasted a week. Cigars tasted great, but all the women in my life hated the smell. I then smoked a pipe for a month. Women liked the smell, but pipe tobacco tasted terrible. My wife still smoked, but was supportive of my attempt even joining in for a while when I started running to clear my lungs of tar and nicotine. I had charts in my office and kitchen at home that tracked first my days without a cigarette, and then my running distances and frequency.
I’d like to say I planned all that, but it evolved intuitively. My process does include several elements of implantation infrastructure:
I first “read” Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations in Philosophy 101 in college. Like a lot of books I “read” in college, I practiced my Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics skill, i.e., I skimmed liberally. I do remember the professor saying that “the Greek Stoics,” with whom Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius was enamored, “did not elevate reason above emotion like the Platonists.” The professor said this with a certain sneer, but I quite liked the idea of viewing humanity’s soul as a unitary phenomenon, logos and eros, left and right brain, intuition and reason combined.
Marcus Aurelius, logged by historians as a “good Emperor,” well, better than Caligula to be sure, wrote Meditations, while on a military campaign against the rebellious Germanic tribes. Nothing like a war, to make you reflect on becoming a better person. Still Marcus Aurelius did write some pithy words that might help us in the New Year’s resolution department:
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