Tired of New Year’s resolutions that fizzle by February? What if the problem isn’t your willpower, but the way we’ve been taught to approach change itself?
This episode introduces the Unresolution, a gentler and more effective approach to personal growth that works with your real life, not against it. Learn how to replace rigid resolutions with flexible experiments, harsh self-judgment with curious observation, and all-or-nothing thinking with permission to adapt.
You’ll discover:
• Why traditional resolutions often fail (and what to do instead)
• Three powerful shifts to make your goals more sustainable
• How to design tiny experiments that create lasting change
• A practical framework for staying in conversation with your growth
• Why quitting thoughtfully can be a sign of wisdom, not weakness
Whether you’re planning ambitious changes or seeking subtle shifts, this episode offers a fresh perspective on beginning again. Perfect for anyone who wants to grow without the grinding pressure of perfection.
This isn’t about abandoning your dreams for change. It’s about changing the container you put them in. Ready to try something different this year?
Note: This episode pairs beautifully with our previous episode on “The Myth of the Clean Slate”
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Episode Transcript:
Jonathan Fields: [00:00:00] So it’s January 1st. Imagine you made it through the first day of the year. It’s night. The sun goes down. The novelty of the day has worn off. Your feet is full of day. One out of 365 posts, gym selfies, green smoothies, and neatly written resolutions. You, meanwhile, are in this kind of strange quiet in-between. Maybe you nailed the day. Maybe you didn’t. Maybe you didn’t really start at all. And you’re already telling yourself, okay, the real New Year starts tomorrow, or maybe Monday or soon. There’s that little voice that says, if I don’t get this right now, the whole year is kind of doomed. So you do what we’ve all been trained to do. You try to draft the perfect resolution, the perfect habit streak, the perfect health plan, the perfect productivity system, the perfect version of you who finally gets it together and just never falls off. And underneath all of that is this pressure. If I just push hard enough, design it well enough, want it badly enough, I can finally fix myself this year. Here’s the question I want to explore with you today. What if the problem isn’t that you don’t want it badly enough, or aren’t disciplined enough, or haven’t found the right planner or app? I mean, what if the problem is the way that we’ve been taught to do the new year in the first place? What if the traditional resolution, this rigid, all or nothing promise that you make to a future you is is the wrong tool for an actual human life? And what if there’s a different way to begin a gentler, more flexible approach that that doesn’t hinge your worth on perfect follow through that treat your goals as experiments and not ultimatums that it makes quitting and changing your mind just a part of the process, not proof of failure.
Jonathan Fields: [00:02:05] So in this episode, I want to share something I’ve come to think of as the UN resolution. It’s a way to step into the year that it keeps your desire for growth and change, but it lets go of the self punishing, perfection obsessed container that so often just breaks us. We will also include a link in the show notes to a simple one pager PDF that you can download with all of the questions and prompts in it, so that you can sit down and work your way through it afterwards, if that’s easier for you. So excited to share this episode with you! I’m Jonathan Fields and this is Good Life Project.. So in our last episode, we talked about what I call the myth of the Clean slate. This is the idea that, you know, in order to start fresh, you need to erase your past self, wipe away your history and become a totally new you. And we explored something really different treating your past year as data, not a verdict welcoming your past selves back into the picture instead of dragging them out to the curb.
Jonathan Fields: [00:03:14] Um, beginning this new chapter with the person who lived last year. Not in spite of them. So here we are. You don’t need a clean slate. You don’t need to become some mythical, flawless version of yourself before you’re allowed to move forward. That raises a pretty big question, though. Okay, if I’m not doing New Year, new me, then how do I actually begin again? How do you step into this year with with intention, without making a brittle list of resolutions that you already secretly know will crack by February at the latest? That’s what we’re going to explore today, because this episode is not about abandoning growth or goals or dreams. It’s just about changing the container you put them in. So let’s start by taking a really honest look at how we’ve been taught to do resolutions. Even if you don’t write them down anymore, a lot of us, we still carry this internal template that looks something like this. Pick a handful of things that you’re unhappy with. Turn them into bold, sweeping declarations. Attach your self-image to doing them perfectly, and then start January 1st. Like your life is a movie montage. Hope that this time your willpower doesn’t run out. And just to be clear, we’re not talking about thoughtful, you know, flexible frameworks here. Things like success, scaffolding, that structure that I’ve shared over the years for bringing big, deeply meaningful goals to life in a real world, adaptive way that work still stands in my mind.
Jonathan Fields: [00:04:53] It still matters and we’ll keep building on it. What I’m talking about right now is the Cultural Revolution template most of us inherit. Things like I will never eat X again, or I will go to the gym every day, or I will meditate for 30 minutes every morning, or I will write a thousand words a day. I will become that person. It tends to have a few built in problems. First of all, it’s all or nothing. If you’re on your succeeding, if you miss a day or two, you’re off and the resolution is broken. There’s no such thing as a messy middle or good enough for this season, or adjusted because life happened. It’s just very binary, and real life is not so. Second, it often exists in a vacuum. You design it in this kind of weird time bubble, maybe during the holidays or a quiet weekend. You know, when your schedule is disrupted, your energy doesn’t match the rest of the year, and your stressors aren’t fully online either. So you you kind of create this idealized plan for, quote, future you who you know, always sleeps well and never gets sick and never has caregiving emergencies, and never gets a curveball at work and never feels lonely or tired or overwhelmed. And then January 3rd shows up with reality and and you’re perfectly engineered.
Jonathan Fields: [00:06:33] Resolution doesn’t actually fit the contours of your actual lived life. So third, it relies heavily on willpower as the main fuel. The unspoken story is something like this. If you really wanted this badly enough. You just make yourself do it. I mean, every day, no matter what. Which, unfortunately ignores the environments that you’re in, the systems or lack of them around you. Your nervous system, your mental health, past trauma, neurodivergence and just basic human variation. So when resolutions start to wobble, we usually don’t say, ah, I see what’s happening here. This structure just wasn’t designed for a complex, dynamic life. What we do say is some version of I guess I just don’t have what it takes. And if that’s you, I just want to say you’re not broken. You’re not uniquely bad at follow through. Your capital H in a lot of the resolution containers that we have been handed simply aren’t designed for real, messy, beautiful human lives. So? So what if we change the container? What if, instead of a resolution, we tried the UN resolution. So let me be clear about something up front. When I say UN resolution, I’m not saying stop caring or give up on yourself or just drift and see what happens. And I’m definitely not saying that goals are bad, or that things like success, scaffolding, or other frameworks that really do help you achieve bigger, meaningful, more long term sustained things no longer matter.
Jonathan Fields: [00:08:24] In fact, everything we’re talking about today is meant to play well with those kinds of structures. It’s the it’s the stance underneath them that we’re talking about here. The UN resolution is less about what you aim at and more about how you hold those aims. Think of it as three big shifts. So pillar number one direction over dictate. And by the way, for those who are listening in, if you didn’t listen to the last Thursday episode of mine where we talked about closing out the year and the myth of the Clean Slate, um, I’ll share here that for that and for these first two episodes to start out this year, um, feel free to listen along. Feel free to pause and respond to some of these ideas and thoughts and questions and prompts in real time. Take out a journal, a notebook, whatever feels good to you, or we will include a PDF one sheet that you can just download and go through all of the core ideas and and questions and prompts in the show notes. So just take a look at the show notes when you’re done, and click the link and you’ll be able to download this free um, PDF one pager with basically all the key ideas, prompts, and questions in this episode. Okay, so pillar number one direction over dictate. So instead of starting the year with this rigid quantified commandments list, lose x pounds. Write every day, never do y.
Jonathan Fields: [00:09:58] The UN resolution invites you to start with a direction. So what is that? Well, a direction is more like a compass heading than a finish line. Things like move toward vitality or move toward deeper connection, or move toward creative expression. Move toward calmer evenings. Move toward feeling more rooted in my body. Notice that those things are actually not vague affirmations. They’re specific enough to feel real, but also open enough to allow different expressions over time. A dictate says, do this exact thing in this exact way every day or you failed a direction says. Keep steering your life in this general way and allow yourself to adapt how you do that as really as you learn. Okay, so that’s pillar number one. Pillar number two is about experiments over edicts. So once you choose a direction and you can pause and do that now if you want, or just come back and again, you know, like do the work, do the notes in your notebook, your notes app, whatever. Download the PDF and you’ll be able to follow along. Right. So experiments over edicts. Once you choose that direction, the traditional resolution move is then to craft an edict. I will do X every single day this year. I will never do Y again. I will hit Z by this date no matter what, right? So if you’re saying to yourself that you know that my dictate is, you know, or my original thing is my resolution is I’m going to, you know, like I’m going to lose £10.
Jonathan Fields: [00:11:43] Um, and then the, you know, once you get to the what am I actually going to do to make that happen? You know, the edict says I will eat only 12 calories a day this year. Don’t do that, by the way. Please don’t do that. I will never eat anything that is not on my quote. Okay, approved foods list. Or I will hit this very specific weight by this date, no matter what. Right. In an UN resolution world, you don’t start with an edict. You start with an experiment. An experiment sounds more like, hey, for the next two weeks, I’m going to try a ten minute walk after lunch and see how it feels. Or for the next seven days, I’m going to put my phone in another room after 9 p.m. and just kind of notice what happens. Or for the next three weeks, I’ll experiment with blocking 30 minutes twice a week for creative time and track whether it energizes or depletes me. Um, if you’re looking to improve your nutrition for the next ten days, I’m going to try and eat, you know, more plants with my food. Experiments are time bound. They have clear, modest parameters. Um, they expect to be adjusted, and they generate information, not judgment. So you’re not asking, did I prove I’m disciplined? You’re asking, what did this experiment teach me about my life, my energy, my desires, my constraints and reality? Okay.
Jonathan Fields: [00:13:36] Pillar number three, here Is. Review over. Judgment. Review over. Judgment. What does that mean? So this third shift is about building in regular gentle reviews instead of these harsh verdicts. So in a resolution mindset, when something isn’t working, we usually either ignore it and push harder, or we declare it a failure and just abandon it in a wave of shame. And again, I am raising my hand here. I have done this myself so many times in past years and past versions of myself. Um. An UN resolution. Instead, you schedule a short recurring. Just check in with yourself once a week, once every two weeks. Whatever feels right for your life, you ask? Okay, so what worked, what felt harder than I thought it would. And notice I didn’t use the word should. I didn’t say what felt harder than I thought it should. What? Well, what felt harder than I thought it would. Because we’re taking the judgment out of this ask. What surprised me? What didn’t I see coming there? What? Just totally surprised me. Wow. Who knew? Ask. What did this reveal about the life I’m actually living right now? Not about the fantasy life or the perfect resources and constraints and willpower. What did this reveal about the life I’m actually living right now? And then we want to ask, given what I’ve learned, do I want to keep this experiment, tweak it, or let it go? Has it served its purpose? We’ll get more concrete with this later, but that’s the heart of the UN resolution.
Jonathan Fields: [00:15:35] These three pillars a direction instead of a dictate, experiments instead of edicts, and a review instead of judgment. It’s kind of like a living relationship with change. Not a once a year contract that you’re terrified to break. And we’ll be right back after a word from our sponsors. So let me give you a contrast from my own life. There have been seasons where I have done the classic resolution thing. So I’ll, I’ll meditate every day for 30 minutes. I will work out six days a week. I will write 2500 words every single morning at 5 a.m., and sometimes for a little while it works. And then every single time life happens, right, a launch hits a family situation erupts, travel throws a wrench and everything, and travel through a lot of wrenches into a lot of things. For me, in the second half of this year that had I been operating on a sort of like the the dictate and edict mentality, it would have been a total disaster. So old me, the resolution me would interpret that as I blew it. I broke the streak. This isn’t working. Maybe I’m just not that person. But the newer, more gentle, maybe older, hopefully just a touch wiser. Me. The resolution me tries to treat a little bit differently.
Jonathan Fields: [00:17:14] So instead of asking why didn’t I stick to the plan, I’ll ask why? What did this plan assume about my life? That isn’t true? What did I learn from the days that it did actually work? What variations might work better with the actual life that I’m living now. And that tiny shift from I fail. The plan to the experiment gave me data. That’s where everything starts to really change. Now I want to zoom in on two ideas that live inside the UN resolution here also. One is the joy of quitting and the other is the beauty of incompletion. Let’s start with quitting. We are taught from from the youngest time that there’s this iconic quote, right? We’ve all heard it. We’ve seen it in movies. Maybe you’ve been told it by coaches or parents or people who are thought they really were giving you the best and setting you up for success. Winners never quit that quote, right? Or don’t be a quitter, right? Or once you start, you have to finish. And oftentimes the intent behind it is actually is is good. People just want the best for you, right? That sounds noble until it traps you in the commitments or experiments that no longer serve the person you are now. We’re never truly aligned with who you are and what matters to you your values. We’re designed for a fantasy version of your life, not the real one.
Jonathan Fields: [00:18:58] Write in a resolution world. Quitting is a scarlet letter. In an UN resolution world, quitting on the thoughtfully is one of your most powerful tools. Which begs a question. So how do you tell the difference between giving up and letting go? With wisdom. Right? Remember I said quitting? Done thoughtfully. We can kind of reframe those as, yeah, there’s two sides just giving up and letting go with wisdom. And again, even the phrase giving up feels a little weird to me, right? Because there’s judgment implied in there. So but we’re going to use it for now because I’m not really sure what else to use. So giving up is usually it’s fast, it’s reactionary, it’s driven by shame or fear. It’s accompanied by a harsh inner narrative. Things like, oh, I knew you couldn’t do it, or you always bail letting go. With wisdom, though, it’s almost like the exact opposite. It tends to be slower. It’s reflective rather than reactionary. It’s grounded in what you’ve learned, and it’s anchored in your values, in a clear understanding of what does and doesn’t matter to you, what is or isn’t important to you, right? So when you sense that something might need to go, you pause and ask a few questions. One. Does this still Genuinely matter to me in this moment or season of my life. Not just because I said it would. Weeks, months, or even years ago when I made the initial commitment to.
Jonathan Fields: [00:20:40] Is this version of the goal or habit actually compatible with my current reality? Right? You may have started and life was good. You have plenty of free time, you’re in good health and then over time you don’t have plenty of time anymore. You have compounding responsibilities, overlapping things, and maybe you’re sick. Maybe you’re dealing with something chronic, right? So we always want to think about our current reality. We ask that second question. Is this version of the goal or habit actually compatible with my current reality? That brings us to the third. If I let this go, am I moving toward something that matters more or simply away from discomfort. That is such a big one for me and I think for everyone. I’ll repeat it again if I let this go, am I moving towards something that matters to me or simply away from discomfort? So sometimes you’ll find, yes, this matters deeply, but the way I’ve structured it, it doesn’t fit my life. I need a smaller or a kinder experiment right now. Other times you realize this doesn’t really belong to me. It came from someone else’s expectation, or from comparison or from fear. Again, raising my hand. I have done things because of all of those, and letting go is actually an act of integrity in those moments, not failure. So I can think of times in my own life where I stayed in a commitment way longer than was healthy, because I didn’t want to be a quitter.
Jonathan Fields: [00:22:25] I didn’t want to be seen by others as that person who quits. I stayed because I had attached my identity to the person who sees everything through. Even though some other part of me was quietly saying, dude, this is just costing us way too much in your humanity, your health, your mental health, your wellbeing. And I can think of times when I finally let go of something, a project, a direction, um, an entire company, even something I’d been working on for years, even a way of structuring my days. And within days I just feel. I feel my shoulders drop, my breathing slow and deep in my energy, come back online, my vitality returning. And that’s how you know this was the right move. And that feeling when it sustains and doesn’t just vanish as a temporary salve for not wanting to feel discomfort anymore, but when it sustains and builds again big signals. That’s right. That’s the joy of quitting. Un resolution style. It’s the joy of reclaiming your energy and attention from things that no longer fit if they ever did. So you can reallocate them toward what actually does matter now. So let’s talk about the beauty of incompletion then. Kind of like a nice compliment here. Traditional resolution culture. It worships finishing. I’ll feel proud when it’s done. If I don’t finish, it doesn’t count. Oh, man, I have lived that one.
Jonathan Fields: [00:24:12] Or halfway doesn’t mean anything, right? But the thing is, life really doesn’t work that way, does it? You will start things you don’t finish. You’ll get halfway into a project and realize it’s not what you thought. You’ll be in process with parts of yourself for years, maybe decades. Incompletion is not a glitch in the system. In many ways, it is the system. So I like to think of life as kind of like an ongoing manuscript, like the writer in me. Some chapters are in second or third draft, some are still rough notes and fragments, some are just a title and an empty page. You know, in that frame, unfinished doesn’t automatically mean failure. It might mean this did what it needed to do for now. I learned what I needed from this stage. This belongs in this season as a sketch, and maybe not the masterwork. One phrase I’ve been playing with is complete enough for now. Not completed forever. Not perfect, just complete enough for now. For who I am and where my life is. So, you know, maybe you didn’t finish the online course, but one module changed how you work. Or you you didn’t write the whole book. But the process of drafting a few chapters clarified what you actually want to say. By the way, this one is really personal to me. You know, a little over a year ago, I committed with a friend to spending, uh, November.
Jonathan Fields: [00:25:50] I guess it was 20, 24. Um, trying my hand at fiction. You know, the goal was to write 50,000 terrible words of a novel in 30 days. And I got halfway through. I wrote about 25,000 words, and then life happened. You know, it was a bit of an insane thing to commit to, especially at that time in my life. I had no business doing it, but I thought it was, you know, superhuman. And, um, and I got halfway through doing it, but. And then I just. Life got so busy and overwhelming with competing demands, I had to kind of, like, put it aside. And for a hot second I was like, oh, I’m a failure at this. And then I was like, no, like, actually, this is still really interesting to me. Um, but continuing with this, it isn’t right for me for this moment of time. Right? But the process of writing 25,000 words was so illuminating and so awesome and so cool. Learning how to write something and construct worlds and characters and dialogue, all of which I’m horrible at still, right? Um, but I knew I was like, this isn’t right for me now. But what I had done, there was so much value in it, I so appreciated it. I didn’t feel any sense of regret or lack or failure. And also there was this voice said that I actually do think there will be a time where you come back to this.
Jonathan Fields: [00:27:08] So it’s okay to kind of set this aside now. And I’m feeling the call really strongly now to invite it back into what I’m doing, right? So back then I said, this is this is sort of complete for what it needs to be for now. And I’m now in a process where I’m hopefully going to be stepping back into that. Um, other examples. Maybe you didn’t build the entire business that you had in your mind, or the private practice, or launch the coaching practice or the craft work that you were working on. But the early experiments, they taught you something crucial about about how you want to serve or create or build, right? Rather than seeing those as failures. The UN resolution, it invites you to say this might be complete enough for this season. I can stay in relationship with the essence of what I wanted without forcing some arbitrary finish line. Let’s make this maybe a little bit more concrete with a tiny practice. If you’re able, you might jot this down. If not, just think through it with me again. Um, we have a PDF sort of one sheet on this when you’re done. If you want, just click the link in the show notes download. It’s free and you can work through it there. But for now, maybe just follow along and think through it with me and we’ll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
Jonathan Fields: [00:28:29] So here we go. I want to invite you to to bring to mind 2 or 3 things from last year that you would label unfinished. You know, maybe the hobby you started and then dropped the project you got halfway through the habit that never solidified, or the the idea you sketched out and then put aside. Just pick one. So take a moment and just kind of in your mind’s eye, pick one. Okay. Now ask yourself, what has this already given me even though it’s not finished? What has this already given me even though it’s not finished. Maybe gave you a sense of what you don’t want. Or a moment of joy or curiosity, or, you know, a skill that you’ll carry into something else or or proof that you’re capable of trying. And then ask, is there a tiny way I’d like to stay in relationship with this without pressuring myself to finish it right now? Again, I’ll repeat that. Is there a tiny way I’d like to stay in relationship with this without pressuring myself to to finish it right now? Maybe instead of finishing the whole course, you revisit one lesson that really resonated. Or instead of finishing a big creative project, you give yourself permission to just make one small, low stakes thing in that medium. Or instead of forcing yourself to complete the original goal, you carry forward the part of its spirit that still feels alive in you.
Jonathan Fields: [00:30:11] It’s an UN resolution, world incompletion. It isn’t a scar on your record. Sometimes it’s just the most honest place for someone to live right now. Um, by the way, this applies to me for books, too. Um, I quit books, and I. Or I leave them in places of beautiful incompletion on a regular basis. Um, even though I’m a writer and I love to think that everybody reads every word of the books that I write. All right. Something’s a little bit off there. Okay, so let’s let’s bring this down out of the abstract also and into your January now. Right. Because that’s really what we’re talking about here. I want to walk you through a very simple, practical UN resolution practice that you can start right now. So if you have a notebook or a note app, grab it if you can. Again, after this, you can just listen through this if you want. Now um, and then check out the, um, the one page or the downloadable in the show notes. If not, you can do this mentally. Come back later to write. We’ll move through three steps here. One. Choose a direction. Two. Design 1 or 2 experiments and then three. Decide when you’ll check in. So step one choose a direction, not a resolution. Instead of writing resolutions, I’m going to invite you to pick one primary direction for this month. For this month, just one. Ask yourself if my life were to tilt just a little more in one area over the next month, what would I want that tilt to be? If my life were to tilt just a little more in one area over the next month, what would I want that tilt to be? So some examples might be, uh, moving towards feeling more grounded in my body.
Jonathan Fields: [00:32:01] Uh, move towards more ease in my evenings. Move toward Deeper connection with one person who matters to me. Move toward more honest creative expression. Move toward a calmer relationship with work. You don’t have to phrase it perfectly. Don’t worry about perfect language here. Just choose a direction that feels alive, not like a should. Something that just kind of like, almost like vibrates in you. I don’t know about you, but for me, I get this physical tell when something is aligned with me. I literally start to shake a little bit. I feel it in my body. And if you’re writing, jot down something like In January, I want to move in the direction of and then fill in the end of that sentence. Right. Take a moment and let something surface here. Okay. If you’re just thinking this through, just think it through. And you can always come back and sort of write this out too. Step two design 1 or 2 experiments. Now for that direction. We’re going to design 1 or 2 small experiments. Remember, an experiment is time limited, specific, but simple and something you’re genuinely curious about, not something that you’re already dreading, which so many resolutions are.
Jonathan Fields: [00:33:25] So let’s play with some examples. If your direction is, let’s say, move toward feeling more grounded in my body, your experiments might be things like for the next two weeks, I’ll try a ten minute walk after lunch on weekdays and notice how I feel. Or for the next seven nights, I’ll pause for three deep breaths before I open my laptop after dinner and see what happens. Another example let’s say if your direction is move toward deeper connection with one person, maybe your experiments look like twice a week for the next two weeks. I’ll send that person a short audio or text telling them one thing I appreciate. Or I’ll ask them once this month. Hey, how are you? Really? And actually listen longer than usual. Or maybe if your direction is, move toward more honest creative expression. This is something that has become a real focus for me too. You know, your experiments might be for the next three weeks. I’ll set a 15 minute timer twice a week and make something words, sketches, scraps that nobody else has to see. For me, one of the ways that I actually kind of operationalize this in the last year, because I want a little bit more structure and accountability around it, is I would sign up for time limited workshops. So when I was learning Metalsmithing, I would sign up for a weekend intro course.
Jonathan Fields: [00:35:03] So, like, spend two days immersing myself in learning the art of metalsmithing or, you know, four weeks or six weeks working with a master metalsmith or learning a particular thing. Time limited. It was something, and it was really all just about learning. Like there’s no illusion about me being amazing at doing this from the get go. So whatever your direction is, see if you can come up with one experiment that feels almost laughably small and maybe a second one if you’re feeling it, and write it out as like, take this sentence format for the next insert amount of time, I’ll experiment with insert action or commitment and just notice what it’s like. Again, download the the one sheet um in the show notes. If you want all the specific language here, or just hit pause now and do it again. For the next insert amount of time, I’ll experiment with insert action and just notice what it’s like. Take a moment here to let one experiment take shape. Think about it. Write it down if it feels good to you. Okay, now step three. Decide when you’ll check in. This is where we bring in that third pillar. Review over judgment. Right? So pick a time ideally maybe once a week or once every two weeks, long enough for you to actually see things unfold, but short enough where you don’t start drifting and you’ll take this time.
Jonathan Fields: [00:36:35] And this will be when you you’ll spend 5 to 10 minutes checking in with yourself. And it could be, you know, a Sunday evening, a Friday at lunch, Sunday morning. Before you dive into email, write it down. Write this. I’ll check in with myself every and then make your commitment week two weeks, month, whatever it may be, right? I think it’s really important to write these things down, by the way, because your brain encodes them differently when you actually eventually write them down. So even if you’re just following along thinking this now, then please, I invite you when you’re done with this to go back and actually write these things down. It lands very differently when we do that. Like memorializing, it just makes it more real for us. So you’ll write that that final sentence for the check in down. I’ll check in with myself every and insert whatever the time that feels right for you. And when that time comes, now you ask a few simple questions. One what worked about this experiment, right to what felt harder than I expected? Three what did this reveal about my actual life right now? And do I want to keep this experiment, tweak it, or let it go right? Four simple questions. What worked about this experiment? What felt harder than I expected? What did this reveal about my actual life right now. And do I want to keep this experiment? Tweak it or let it go? If an experiment isn’t working, that doesn’t mean you failed.
Jonathan Fields: [00:38:06] Remember? It means you just got information. You might keep it as is, you might shrink it, you might change it, or change when you do it, swap it for something else, or consciously decide to end it and just reclaim that energy for something else. That is the UN resolution. In practice. It’s not about, you know, nailing the right decision on January 1st. It’s about committing to an ongoing conversation with your life. So before we land this episode, I want to zoom back out for a second. If the first episode in this series, The Myth of the Clean Slate, was about who you’re bringing into the new year, this one is about how you walk with that person. It says, I’m not going to demand perfection from myself to justify change. I’m not going to hinge my self-worth on some ridiculous 30 day streak I’m allowed to learn as I go to adjust to to quit things that don’t fit. To leave some things unfinished for now. You don’t have to fix everything this month. You don’t have to become new you by next week. You get to be in relationship with your life. Curious. Adaptive. Experimental. So if you haven’t yet, here’s what I’d love you to do before we wrap this episode. Write down your One Direction for January. Write down one tiny experiment. Decide when in the next week you’ll check in with yourself.
Jonathan Fields: [00:39:43] That’s it. You’ve just created your first UN resolution. And then if it feels good over time, not right away, not out of the gate, but if it feels good over time, maybe February, maybe March, when your life accommodates it and you have the space and you’re curious about like, huh, maybe, maybe I’d explore a different part of my life or a different aspect of myself and, and visit like a new direction for that, right? If it feels good when it feels good, over time, you can explore adding in nuance. In our next episode, we’re going to build on this in a really beautiful way. So we’ve talked about not erasing your past self, approaching change as a series of experiments. And next we’re going to ask a deeper question. What if this year wasn’t primarily about adding more or fixing more, or optimizing more, and was instead about discovering the ways your life is already full, already meaningful already enough? We’ll explore what I’m calling the Year of enough, a different way to experience the year ahead that isn’t driven by constant, quiet sense of lack. But that conversation only really makes sense when you’ve already begun to relate to change in the way that we’ve talked about today. And and also in our year end wrap up the Clean Slate episode last week. So for now, maybe let yourself off the hook for the perfect resolution. Choose a direction, run an experiment, check in, adjust.
Jonathan Fields: [00:41:15] And remember, the goal isn’t to pass some arbitrary test. It’s just to keep walking with the person that you are in the direction of the life that actually fits you and feels good and makes you come and feel alive. Thanks for being here for sharing this New Year moment with me. I’m excited to see where your UN resolution leads. We would love to hear about yours. By the way, feel free to DM or tag us on Instagram at Good Life Project. and I will see you in the next episode. Take care. This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsey Fox and me, Jonathan Fields. Editing help by, Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young. Kristoffer Carter crafted our theme music and of course, if you haven’t already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life Project in your favorite listening app or on YouTube too. If you found this conversation interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did because you’re still listening. Here, do me a personal favor. A seven-second favor is share it with just one person. I mean, if you want to share it with more, that’s awesome too. But just one person even then, invite them to talk with you about what you’ve both discovered to reconnect and explore ideas that really matter, because that’s how we all come alive together. Until next time, I’m Jonathan Fields signing off for Good Life Project.