Top 4 reasons New Years Resolutions fail in the first two weeks


Newsletter Topic: Why New years resolutions don't make it out of January

Hello all, and welcome to 2026!

For the past 7 years, my wife and I take a small weekend retreat to ring in the new year. I'll be honest the purpose of this is to set new years goals/resolutions. I bring a whiteboard (yes—I know how over the top that is), we try to go to a couple nice dinners, and talk through vision: for our family, the year ahead, faith, finances, and the stuff that actually shapes the day to day.

That discipline has has truly been life changing. And allowed us to accomplish a lot more than what we thought was possible.

However, I've set quite a few goals over the past 7 years that did not get accomplished. They were made with good intentions, and high motivation but didn't hit.

I know I'm not alone in this: According to Dr. Asim Shah of Baylor College of Medicine, studies show that 88% of people who set New Year’s resolutions abandon them within the first two weeks.

After ~8,000 hours in the therapy room I believe there are 3 things that work to get your goals past January.

I’ve listened to people name their hopes, outline "the best" systems, swear this year will be different, and then quietly drift back to old patterns. Heck, I've been that person.

Here are the 3 things that work to get your goals past January.

  1. Community

Goals rarely fail because of a lack of information. They fail in isolation. Research consistently shows that social support dramatically increases follow-through on behavior change. A classic finding cited by the American Society of Training and Development showed people are 65% more likely to meet a goal when they commit to someone else, and that number jumps to 95% when progress is reported regularly. Community works because it regulates motivation on days discipline is low. Being seen, known, and expected to show up creates just enough pressure to keep momentum alive. So maybe don't focus as much on the work plan but the workout partner.

2. Commitment
Commitment works because it removes daily negotiation. When a goal relies on commitment it doesn't require continued willpower and motivation that often wains. Structuring a commitment is hard because it is NOT writing a goal down, making a promise to yourself, or telling a friend about your goal. Commitment is signing up for that marathon, actually joining that small group at church, or booking the babysitter for the next 6 months in January to go on date nights.

Behavioral science shows that commitment—not motivation—is what predicts follow-through

(Open Journal of Social Sciences). Other studies show that commitment devices—clear rules, timelines, or accountability agreements—significantly improve outcomes, especially when paired with social feedback (BMC Public Health).

3. Competition
Effort increases when stakes are visible. Research on motivation and behavior change shows that structured competition boosts consistency and performance, even when the competition is friendly. A large-scale study analyzing fitness challenges found participants increased effort simply because progress was measured and compared (NIH / PMC). Competition works because it sharpens focus and activates engagement systems in the brain. It doesn’t require ego—just a clear challenge that pulls potential forward. Something to chase keeps progress from drifting.

Bonus: Coaching
Research from the International Coaching Federation consistently shows individuals working with a coach report greater goal clarity, higher self-efficacy, and faster behavioral change compared to self-directed efforts (ICF Research). Coaching works because it adds someone who sees your blind spots, challenges rationalizations, and keeps the goal alive when your motivation wanes. Most people don’t fail from lack of effort. They fail from lack of adjustment. Coaching solves that.

Make 2026 the year you don't rely on willpower,

Zach

Founder of Mental Health 4 Men & Clinical Therapist

The MH4M Marathon Recap

Thank you all for everything you did to make this such a huge success.

  1. We raised over our goal of 1,000 dollars... (I genuinely can't believe it. A newsletter with a couple hundred people really showed out!)

Right now, we had runners from:

Florida
Colorado
Mississippi
Kansas
Oklahoma
Texas
Georgia
California
Missouri

Fastest 10k time - Stephen Kielhofner 31:49 (5:07 / mi pace) That is cooking!



Mental Health 4 Men

This newsletter is designed to give you researched backed skills to improve your mental, emotional and relational lives.

Read more from Mental Health 4 Men
LOL JASON KELCE! - NFL - How you eat/drinking impacts your mental health: when your gut is suffering, your brain suffers too

Newsletter Topic: The surprising connection between what you eat and how you feel Everyone knows they “should be healthier.” But most people don’t realize how directly their diet affects their mental health. Hey all, I sat down with a guy in my office a while back who was struggling with low mood and anxiety/panic attacks that he couldn't get reprieve from. He’d tried therapy. He’d tried medication. He’d started exercising. Nothing was really working. So we looked at his eating habits. “I...

Part 4 of 4: Am I doing conflict wrong in my relationship?

“When marriages fail, it is not increasing conflict that is the cause. It is decreasing affection and emotional responsiveness...” ― Sue Johnson Hey all, I was working with a couple months back... They'd been fighting about the same thing for three years. Dishes in the sink. Sounds trivial, right? But it wasn't really about the dishes. It was about the fact that every time he left them there, she felt invisible and her time was being disrespected. And every time she brought it up, he said...

Part 3: The science behind lasting relationships & new sponsor for MH4M

Part 3 of 4: The science behind lasting relationships "Happy couples aren't smarter, richer, or more psychologically astute than others. But in their day-to-day lives, they have hit upon a dynamic that keeps their negative thoughts and feelings about each other from overwhelming their positive ones." ― John M. Gottman Hey all, Over the past two weeks, we've covered Gottman's Four Horsemen. If you missed out here are the links below. Part 1: Criticism and Contempt Part 2: Defensiveness and...