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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.
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 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 Bonus: Coaching Make 2026 the year you don't rely on willpower, Zach Founder of Mental Health 4 Men & Clinical Therapist The MH4M Marathon RecapThank you all for everything you did to make this such a huge success.
Right now, we had runners from: Florida Fastest 10k time - Stephen Kielhofner 31:49 (5:07 / mi pace) That is cooking! |
This newsletter is designed to give you researched backed skills to improve your mental, emotional and relational lives.
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