Picture this. It’s January 1st. Your fresh planner sits ready, resolutions penned with hope, yet something feels different this time. What if the secret to lasting change isn’t about becoming someone new, but understanding who you already are?
In this illuminating episode, we explore why the “clean slate” approach to New Year’s transformation often backfires, and how treating your past as data instead of baggage can unlock genuine, sustainable growth. You’ll discover:
• A powerful alternative to the “new year, new you” mindset that actually works
• Why your “failures” contain the exact information you need to move forward
• Simple practices to turn self-judgment into self-understanding
• How to build on your existing strengths instead of trying to become someone else
• A practical framework for learning from your experiences rather than erasing them
Whether you’re reflecting on the year behind or planning the one ahead, this conversation offers a more compassionate, effective path to personal evolution. Through stories, science, and practical tools, we’ll explore how embracing your full story might be the key to writing its next chapter.
Perfect for anyone feeling the pressure to transform overnight, seeking lasting change, or simply ready for a more authentic approach to personal growth. Join us for a conversation that could reshape how you think about new beginnings.
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Episode Transcript:
Jonathan Fields: [00:00:01] So picture this. It’s the first week of January. Your brand new planner is open. The pens are lined up, the resolutions are written. The apps are downloaded. This is the year you finally become the new you. And for a minute, it actually feels that way. You’re up early. You’re eating right. You’re answering emails like a machine. You’re working out, meditating, maybe even reading all the books you swore you’d get to last year. And you start to think, okay, maybe this is it. Maybe I finally left the old me behind. And then, almost invisibly, it starts. You miss a workout. You snap at someone you love. You doomscroll at midnight instead of going to bed. Raising my hand here, by the way. You break one tiny promise to yourself, and then another. And then another. And then that shiny, hopeful phrase new year, new you. It quietly turns into Here we go again. Same patterns, same stuck places, same you. And underneath it all, this really painful question. If I can’t become the new me. I keep getting sold. Does that mean I’m just not fixable? What if the answer actually has nothing to do with your willpower or your worth, and everything to do with a story that you’ve been told about what it means to start over? So in this episode, I want to share a very different way to close out the year and begin the next one. We’re going to talk about why the whole idea of a clean slate wiped the past.
Jonathan Fields: [00:01:39] Erase the old you become someone entirely new is not only unrealistic, but may actually be the thing that’s keeping you from the kind of change that actually lasts. And we’ll explore a quieter, a a more powerful alternative. Seeing your past self not as a problem to toss out with last year’s confetti, but as your greatest resource, your built in library of data and wisdom and truth about what you actually need to build a life that fits. We’ll look at how to turn this year into information instead of indictment. How to stop starting from war with yourself, and how to step into the new year without trying to become someone else, but finally walking forward as you already are. Now, as we go along, I’m going to share a bunch of really valuable questions and prompts that I think will be really valuable and insightful. I think you’ll also really enjoy exploring the answers to. Feel free to just listen through the whole episode and then go back and do them later. You can pause and answer the questions along the way if you want, or 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.
Jonathan Fields: [00:02:59] So excited to share this episode with you! I’m Jonathan Fields and this is Good Life Project.. So a bunch of years back, I had what I still think of as my sort of New Years spreadsheet of perfection. I remember sitting down 1st December night with this kind of giant mug of tea, feeling that delicious mix of nostalgia and possibility. And I thought, okay, this is it. This is the year I finally get my entire life dialed in. So I open up my laptop and I created this monstrosity. Multiple tabs, daily habits, weekly targets, monthly goals. Sleep. Fitness. Work. Relationships, creativity. Money. You know, color codes, formulas, conditional formatting. If my life were a tech startup, this was my series A Pitch deck in January. First I woke up feeling like a machine actually crushed the workout. Ate the perfect breakfast. Meditated. No phone till 10 a.m.. Inbox handled. I was like, who is this guy and where’s he been all my life? I love him and for a handful of days, maybe even more, I was pretty much nailing it. My spreadsheet was a sea of green cells. I would open it just to bask in my own competence. You know that feeling. And then, as it tends to do life, did that thing that life does a project, blew up a family thing, needed my full attention, sleep went sideways, my mood followed. And all the systems, all the structure, all the carefully architected plans, they started to wobble.
Jonathan Fields: [00:04:45] I miss one workout and then two. Or stay up late answering email, which meant I’d be too tired for the morning routine. Then I grabbed something quick to eat that wasn’t part of the plan, and I’d say, oh, I’ll catch up on the weekend. And of course, the weekend came and did what weekends do. A few red cells showed up in that spreadsheet, and then more, and then a whole row. And here’s what’s important. Instead of asking the only useful question huh? What can I learn from this? I went straight to dude, there you go again. You’re just not the kind of person who follows through like this. Old you is back. New you was largely just a fluke. And almost overnight, it wasn’t just the spreadsheet I abandoned in a very quiet, subtle way, I abandoned myself. I mentally dragged old me out to the curb like trash and made this silent promise. Next year, I’ll finally become the real version of me. The one who never falls off. The one who never struggles. And it took me years to see that that move, trying to throw away who I’ve been was actually the very thing that kept me stuck. So today, as we close the chapter on this year and really stand at the threshold of a new one, I want to offer something that runs a little counter to the whole new year new you machine.
Jonathan Fields: [00:06:15] It’s this idea that you need a clean slate to begin again, that you’ve got to erase, outrun, or disown the the you who didn’t live up to your resolutions. I think that’s a myth. And not just a myth. It’s a myth that quietly fuels shame and blocks growth. And and it keeps you just reliving the same patterns year after year. Now, if you’ve been around Good Life Project. for a while, you’ve heard me walk through a framework I developed called Success Scaffolding. It’s this eight part real world adaptable structure for bringing big and meaningful, sometimes even impossible seeming goals to life. That work still stands. I still believe in the power of thoughtful scaffolding, of designing your environment, your support, your mindset, your actions in ways that make change not just possible, but probable. What I’m talking about today is not goals or bad, or plans don’t matter or burn your frameworks. What I am talking about is this even the most elegant framework, including success scaffolding, will struggle to take root if underneath it you’re still carrying this hidden belief that quote old you is broken and needs to be erased. This episode lives underneath all of that. It’s about the layer beneath any resolution, any goal, any scaffolding, your relationship with the person who lived this last year. So in this conversation, we’re going to explore a different way to end the year and begin the next one.
Jonathan Fields: [00:07:51] One that doesn’t require a perfect reinvention or some kind of wholesale upgrade to your personality, but instead it asks you to turn toward the person you’ve actually been this year and say, okay, let’s go together. So let’s start with this clean slate myth. We’ve all heard the phrase maybe even said it ourselves. I just want a clean slate. This year I’m starting from zero. New year, new me. And on the surface, it sounds great. It feels hopeful. Fresh. Empowering. The clean slate myth says to truly start fresh, I need to disown who I’ve been. I need to wipe away the evidence of my missteps, my broken promises, all the times I didn’t show up the way that I wanted to. I need to become a fundamentally different person almost overnight. And you can see it everywhere this time of year. The marketing built on new year, new you, the 30 day boot camps that imply that you’ll come out the other side as a completely different human. This social post sit quietly, say the old you is a problem. The new you will finally be worthy. Look, I get it. It’s emotionally seductive. Frankly, on some level, most of us are carrying moments from the year that we’re not proud of. Like I’m raising my hand here. There are so many moments. Choices we made out of fear. Times we numbed out instead of speaking up. Stuff we meant to do and didn’t.
Jonathan Fields: [00:09:26] The idea that we could just erase all that, hit some cosmic reset button, and step into a version of ourselves that never struggles. Of course, that sounds appealing. A clean slate, it seems like a way to escape, frankly. Shame to skip over the awkward, uncomfortable process of self-examination and jump straight to I’m good now. It gives us the illusion of control. I mean, if I can just reboot hard enough, I’ll never have to feel like this again. But. But here’s the hidden cost. When the only version of you who is allowed to exist is new me who never messes up, then the moment February me shows up. The tired, stressed, imperfect, very human you, the whole experiment just collapses. Because now it’s not just that you slipped on a habit, or missed a workout, or raised your voice or didn’t hit a target. It’s that you have, quote, betrayed this fantasy of who you’re supposed to be. And instead of asking what happened here? What is this trying to show me. You end up asking what is wrong with me? So you turn your past into an enemy. You treat your failures as. And I’m using failures in quotes there, by the way, as evidence that you are just fundamentally broken instead of a instead of information about your life, you cut yourself off from the data. All the incredibly useful, nuanced, sometimes uncomfortable, but always valuable feedback that this year has been offering you about what drains you, about what what nourishes you, or where your nervous system says, nope, uh, where you come alive, what you actually need more of and less of.
Jonathan Fields: [00:11:22] The clean slate myth says burn the evidence, but the evidence is exactly what we need. You also end up planting the seeds of what I call future self-sabotage. Because if your story is this year, I must become a completely different person and you may use different language, but that’s fundamentally what you’re saying. Then every time you act like, well, well, you, it feels like proof that you have failed. You know, one off day isn’t just an off day. It’s a referendum on your identity. So you spiral and shame kicks in and you hide and you say, I’ll try again next year. You literally write off the entire rest of the year and the cycle repeats. Now, in the first two episodes of January, we’re going to explore different ways to move forward from here. In the first episode after this, our January 1st episode called the UN resolution, we’ll look at really how to begin again without turning your life into this rigid list of shoulds or perfectionist rules, and what it might mean to relate to change in a more flexible, humane way. And in that second episode of the year, which is called The Year of Enough. We’ll talk about stepping out of the constant sense of not enough and into a year grounded in a very different way of seeing yourself and your life.
Jonathan Fields: [00:12:46] So, by the way, be sure that you’re following so you do not miss any of these episodes. They build on each other and they’re super powerful. Those episodes will get into the how of moving forward, setting direction, and living into enough. This one today is about the who you’re carrying with you as you do that, and we’ll be right back after a word from our sponsors. So let’s maybe reframe this idea of failure for a moment here. Most of us have been taught, explicitly or implicitly, that when something doesn’t go the way we hoped, it means something about who we are. We didn’t stick with the habit, so we are, quote, lazy. We stayed in the relationship, so we’re weak. We avoided the hard conversations, so we’re cowards. Maybe we fell back into the pattern so we’re hopeless. We take an event and turn it into a verdict. What if instead, we treated it just like data? A simple internal mantra that I have come back to again and again is it’s not a verdict, it’s data. When something this year didn’t go the way you wanted, it doesn’t automatically mean I’m bad at this or I’m broken. It means something happened here. There’s information. Let’s play with this a bit now. So if you’re in a place where you can write, maybe you might even grab a notebook for a moment.
Jonathan Fields: [00:14:17] If not, you can just do this in your mind. And I’m going to ask you a few things. So first question what did I actually attempt this year? And we’re not just talking formal More resolutions or public goals include the quiet hopes here. Things like I want to feel less lonely. I hope to take better care of my body. I’m meant to be more present with my kids. I wanted to be more honest at work. I thought I’d finally take that class or make that art. Or start that thing. Let a few of those surface. So that’s the first question again. If you want to just like hit pause here for a second, use your notes app, use your journal, whatever it is. That’s great. Go ahead and just think about that and I’ll repeat it again for you. That first question was what it actually attempt this year. Again, not formal. Things just include the more quiet hopes or aspirations. Take a beat and then when you’re ready, come back to it. Or you can just listen all the way through now, by the way, and then just go back to this spot and revisit these questions. So let a few of those things surface. Now, second question where did things not go? The way I hoped. And you don’t need to make a long list, by the way, just maybe 3 to 5 things where you just feel some friction.
Jonathan Fields: [00:15:41] Maybe you signed up for something and stopped going. By the way, I did that more than once this year, maybe said, I’m not going to lose my temper like that again. And you did. Or maybe you promised yourself you’d cut back on something work or spending or scrolling, and it didn’t really change. Just notice a few of those things. No need to analyze or anything yet. Now, for each of those, there’s a question that is so much more helpful than what’s wrong with me? Which is where we tend to go. And that question is this. Here’s our third question. What might this be trying to tell me? Maybe you’re I’ll meditate for 20 minutes every day at 5 a.m.. Plan lasted 11 days. So the old story says, well, I can’t stick with anything. I’m not disciplined. What if the news story. What the thing is trying to tell you, if you treat it as data, might sound more like actually light the meditation. But I was exhausted. My evenings were chaos. I was getting to bed late. My nervous system might need sleep more than it needs a perfect 20 minute practice right now. I realize I actually enjoy five minutes, but 20 just felt overwhelming. That is data. Maybe you meant to say no more often or set better boundaries, and yet you found yourself just saying yes to things that drained you. The old story you might tell yourself, oh, I’m such a doormat.
Jonathan Fields: [00:17:07] New story as data may go. Something like. Like I say, yes, when I’m afraid of conflict, I say yes because I don’t want to feel guilty. I say yes because I’m not sure who I am if I’m not being the helpful one. Again, that’s information you can work with. It reveals values and fears and needs and patterns. It’s not a character assassination. When you’re in full shame mode, your brain isn’t in learning mode, it’s in hiding mode. The moment you can shift from I’m terrible to okay, ouch, that didn’t go how I wanted. But what can I learn from it? You open up the possibility of change. So as you look back on this year, what if every quote failure was allowed to just be a feedback form, not a final grade? Now I want to zoom in on something, frankly, probably a little bit more tender here, because this isn’t just about how we interpret events, it’s about how we relate to the versions of ourselves who lived those events. So if you imagine this past year as a room full of you’s, I just love the phrase used. It brings me back to classic movie line. Um, the you who crushed that project, right? The the you who lay awake at 2 a.m., anxious and scrolling. The you who lost your temper. The you who held somebody’s hand in a hard moment.
Jonathan Fields: [00:18:32] The you who avoided the conversation. The you who said yes. When every cell in your body wanted to say no. The you who laughed so hard you cried. Who in that room are you trying hardest not to make eye contact with? Sit with that for a moment. Most of us have certain cells from the year that we’re actively trying to push into the shadows. The overeater, the procrastinator, the conflict avoider, the the people pleaser. The one who stayed too long. The one who left too soon. The clean slate myth. It says, if I can just become, quote, new me, those versions will disappear. I’ll never have to see them again. But that’s not how it works. Those parts don’t vanish. They just go underground. They drive the bus from the basement. They’re still shaping your choices. You’ve just lost the opportunity to understand and integrate them. So when I talk about an unconditional. Yes, I’m not talking about approving of every choice you’ve made. I’m not suggesting you bypass responsibility or skip repair where it’s needed. What I mean is this I will not throw any part of me away. I will not throw any part of me away. One more time. I will not throw any part of me away. I will not pretend that the versions of me who coped, who numbed, who froze, who avoided aren’t mine. I’m willing to be in relationship with all of me. And like integration, it doesn’t mean that you’re proud of everything that you did.
Jonathan Fields: [00:20:17] It means you’re willing to keep every past version of you in the family photo And the moment you stop exiling those parts and instead turn toward them, something really powerful becomes possible. You can finally ask them what they were trying to do for you. This is sort of like one of the fundamental bases of IFS or internal family systems, which is kind of like the hot child in psychotherapy these days. Right? So you can finally ask them what they were trying to do for you. Then the you who ate late last night might have been trying to soothe a loneliness you hadn’t named yet. The you who overworked it might have been trying to feel safe in a world that felt unpredictable. The you who scroll for hours might have been trying to turn down the volume on grief. I mean, are those always the most skillful strategies? Probably not. But when you understand the why underneath, you can start to offer yourself different options that honor the need without harming the rest of you. So I want to try really simple, uh, sort of a compassion practice with you. It’s short. You can do it wherever you are. As long as you’re not driving or doing something that needs your full attention here, if you’re driving or moving, you can just listen and come back to this later if you’re able.
Jonathan Fields: [00:21:36] Maybe close your eyes for a moment or just soften your gaze. That’s fine too, and bring to mind just one version of you from this year that you’ve been judging pretty harshly. Maybe it’s the you who stayed in a situation that wasn’t great. I mean, maybe it’s maybe it’s the you who said something you wish you could take back. Maybe it’s the you who ignored the signs your body was sending. And I have done that a bunch this year. Maybe it’s the you who made a choice that still stings when you think about it. Just let that version of you sit across from you in your mind’s eye. Notice what they look like. Notice the expression on their face. Notice how tired or scared or overwhelmed they might seem. And if it feels okay, place a hand on your heart or on your chest. Or somewhere that feels supportive to you. Take a slow, easy breath. And silently, just in your mind, say something like, of course you did what you did. You were trying to get me through something hard. I might choose something differently now with what I know, but I’m not going to throw you away. And another breath. And you might add, you’re part of my story. You belong. We’re on the same team. And stay with that for just another moment. And then when you’re ready, you can release the image. Let your hand rest back where it was and if your eyes were closed, you can just open them again.
Jonathan Fields: [00:23:21] Take one more breath and just settle into that. So that simple act of of turning toward instead of away is the foundation for everything that comes next. Because before we talk about how to begin again differently, before we talk about any any future experiments or frameworks, we start here. We refuse to begin the new year by declaring war on the person who lived this one. Let me say that again. We refuse to begin the New Year by declaring war on the person who lived this one. You don’t build a good life on top of self-rejection you build it with the the full, messy, beautiful, sometimes painful truth of who you’ve actually been. So let’s talk about identity for a minute. Not in the big philosophical sense, but in the just very practical day to day sense of what kind of person do I believe I am? I mean, most of the loud, shiny New Year culture is obsessed with aspiration. Next year I will become the kind of person who does this perfectly. I will become more disciplined, more organized, more productive, more spiritual, more everything, basically. Look, there’s nothing wrong with wanting to grow. And again, there’s absolutely a place for thoughtful frameworks and scaffolding that supports growth. I’ve spent a lot of time developing them myself and practicing them myself. But but when you only ask, who do I want to be next year without ever looking at who you’ve actually been, you run into a problem.
Jonathan Fields: [00:24:54] You risk choosing identities that are aspirational but completely disconnected from your lived reality based on a comparison, pressure, or marketing. So far from what your nervous system has experienced that they feel like a costume. So if for years your quiet story has been, I’m just not someone who follows through trying to force yourself into. I’m a high performance machine who never misses a day. That’s a pretty big leap. Your brain is too smart for that. It’s not going to buy it. So instead of inventing a brand new identity out of thin air on January 1st, I mean, what if we started by just noticing the identity that’s already trying to emerge? What if, before asking, who will I be? We asked, who have I already been in my best, truest moments this year? So let’s explore that. If you can think back over your year and look for just glimpses of the person you want to be, not in some idealized form, but in a tiny, real human moments. I mean, maybe it was, you know, the day you had a hard conversation you’ve been avoiding and you stayed kind and honest. Or the time that you chose rest over yet another hour of work, even though the to do list was screaming at you or the that you know, the moment that you you walked away from a situation that wasn’t okay.
Jonathan Fields: [00:26:17] The evening that you you play with your kids or your friends or your partner and actually let yourself be present. Or maybe it was the morning that you went for a short walk, not because you should exercise, but because your body just wanted fresh air, or the hour that you spent making something. Writing, cooking, building, drawing. For me, a lot of this year was metal smithing, weirdly enough, brand new thing in my life just because it felt good. These moments may have been small. They might not have made your highlight reel, you might have forgotten them. But they’re identity clues. They’re saying, hey, this is also you. This is who you’re becoming. So if you like, you can even turn these into sort of like quiet identity statements. You know, things like, I am someone who tells the truth with care. Or, uh, I am someone who is learning to honor my limits. I am someone who keeps coming back even after I fall off. Or, um, I’m someone who cares deeply about my people. I’m someone who is slowly and perfectly listening to my body. I’m someone who creates things even in tiny ways. I mean, notice the language here. I am someone who is learning to fill in the blank. We’re not jumping straight to perfection. We’re acknowledging a certain trajectory, like a direction. And as you do this, I want to be really clear.
Jonathan Fields: [00:27:50] We’re not designing new goals yet. We’re not locking in a big plan. We’re not doing New Year strategy. That’s what the next couple of episodes will actually help out with, in a very different way than you’ve heard before, along with all the tools and frameworks that we will revisit over time. Things that I’ve shared in past years like success, scaffolding. Right now we’re simply noticing who have I already been this year in ways that feel aligned with the life I actually want? Because when you walk into the next year holding that evidence, it just changes the conversation. You’re not saying I have to become an entirely new person. You’re saying, I’ve already been this person in flashes. How can I keep honoring that part of me? And I’d love to offer a very simple urine ritual that you can do with me now or or come back to later when you have more time. Maybe. So if you’re able, grab a notebook, grab your favorite note app, whatever it is on your phone or your device. I’ve actually been kind of flipping back and forth between note apps and and paper and pen or actually paper and pencil lately. Um, we spent some time in Japan over this summer and I kind of fell in love with Japanese stationery and notebooks and super cool pencils. I’m a weird nerd and I geek out over stuff like that, so I’ve been slowly kind of finding my way back to, uh, beautiful mechanical pencils and paper.
Jonathan Fields: [00:29:20] Even though I had been an electronic notes person. Like, I use my notes app for everything. Can’t imagine how many thousands of notes I have. So maybe play around with this a little bit. Like just what feels right to do. A little bit of playful note taking and thought here. Right. So, and if you don’t want to write this down right now, that’s completely fine. Just listen in, listen in, travel along. Um, walk through this mentally. You can always go back for it. This isn’t about creating a perfect, exhaustive review of your year. It’s just about taking a few minutes to relate to yourself differently. And we’ll move through these these three questions. And we’ll be right back after a word from our sponsors. So question one what wants to be seen? What wants to be seen? I know it’s a little bit of a weird question. What wants to be seen? Take a breath. Now looking back over this year, what moments keep tugging at your sleeve? There might be moments, moves. Losses. Wins. Transitions. There might be small, quiet scenes that for some reason, just keep playing in your mind’s eye or they stick with you. They could have happened almost a year ago, but they’re still fresh as day when you just think about them. I’ll give you a few categories that you can play with.
Jonathan Fields: [00:30:53] Maybe this will help. Also, maybe a moment that you’re proud of, a moment you regret. A moment that surprised you. Maybe a moment that broke your heart. Maybe not even because something that happened to you. Or maybe it’s just something that you witnessed. Maybe a moment that made you feel deeply alive. And you don’t have to write the whole story here. It’s not about recording a verbatim dictation of exactly what happened, just a word or a short phrase that brings each moment to mind, just like something that triggers you to see that scene again. So give yourself a minute here. Um, if you want to hit pause. Totally cool. Do this and come back. Or again, you can just listen through and then come back to this place and then spend time and do it, um, actually do the exercise. So that brings us to question number two. What are these moments trying to tell you? Now look at 1 or 2 of those moments and gently ask, what did this show me about what matters to me? Right. I’m going to share those two things again. So the big question is, what are these moments trying to tell you? Right. And now look at 1 or 2 of those. Just pick one if you want and then gently ask about it. What did this show me about what matters to me. So we’re going a layer deeper here. It’s not just what happened to me, but what did this reveal to me about what matters to me? This is so important, and we rarely ever do it.
Jonathan Fields: [00:32:47] Maybe. Maybe that regret shows you how deeply you value honesty. Maybe the proud moment. It. It shows you how much courage you actually have that you didn’t think you had. Maybe that heartbreak. It reveals how important connection is to you. Or maybe that surprising moment shows you that you’re more resilient than you thought. Right. So then ask, what did this show me about what I need, right? So the first part, what this showed me about what matters to me. And now what did this moment show me about what I need? So maybe you learned that you need more rest than you thought. Or more boundaries, more creative time, more support. I think a lot of us could use most of those things as I’m as we’re kind of walking through this. Right. And finally, there’s the final sort of subquestion here. And what did this show me about how I respond when life gets hard? And what did this show me about how I respond when life gets hard, which for many of us over the last year in some way, shape or form, it has. And there is a moment that we associate it with that shows me something about how I respond when life gets hard. And we answer this not as a judgment, not to judge how we responded, but just as information.
Jonathan Fields: [00:34:18] Right? It might tell you that, oh, when life gets hard, I pull away or I power through and then I crash hard, which tends to be my default. Often I get anxious or I reach for my phone. I reach out to one trusted person, or I go into fix it mode, right? You can even soften the language as you write. So instead of well, I’m terrible at XYZ, maybe just I tend to struggle when fill in the blank instead of I have no willpower. Maybe I get overwhelmed when dot dot dot. Right. Again, we’re not handing down verdicts here. We’re just reading the feedback form. So so pause. And if you want again you know you can just keep listening through and then go back when you’re ready with your notes app or your pen and paper or pencil, a notebook, whatever it may be. And really just spend some time listening, reviewing the cues, hear the questions or prompts, hitting pause and then doing the work. It’s beautiful what comes up, and it’s beautiful. The frame that we bring to it when it does. That brings us to the third sort of meta question here. What part of me do I want to walk into next year with again? What part of me do I want to walk into next year with? So for each of those moments, especially the hard ones, you can ask, what part of me showed up here that I actually want to keep, right? Maybe in that, in that tough conversation, the part of you that showed up.
Jonathan Fields: [00:35:57] It was courage. Maybe in that regret, that moment that brought regret when you think back on it. The part that’s showing up now is your conscience, your desire to do better. Maybe in that loss, the part that showed up was your capacity to love. Maybe in that proud moment, the part, the part that showed up was your creativity, your persistence, your tenderness. See if you can just write one simple sentence. I’m walking into next year with my blank part. Fill in that part of me, that blank right I’m walking into next year with my blank. The part of me that blank. Now here’s some examples. So you get what I’m talking about. I’m walking into next year with my courage. The part of me that told the truth even when my voice was shaking. I’m walking into next year with my tenderness. The part of me that cried with my friend when I didn’t have the answers. I’m walking into next year with my persistence. The part of me that just kept coming back even after I fell off the plan. I’m walking into next year with my curiosity. The part of me that asked, what can I learn from this? Instead of just what is wrong with me? You don’t need to nail the perfect sentence here, by the way.
Jonathan Fields: [00:37:24] This is just you acknowledging I’m not walking into the New year empty. I’m bringing something with me. If you want to spend more time with this me, feel free to pause here as I said, or come back later with a cup of tea, a cup of coffee, matcha, whatever it is that makes you happy. Quiet corner. Sit down and just create a little bit more space to actually walk through these questions and either think through what comes to mind, if that’s your mode. Write it down. If that’s your mode, type it out. If that’s your mode, right. The invitation is to not just let this moment pass you by. So as we start to land this conversation, I kind of want to circle back to where we began the the New Year quote industry will try to sell you on this idea that you’ve got to become someone else, that the quote old you is a problem. Maybe the problem that your past is is baggage, that your missteps are proof that you’re behind. Oh my God. I have bought into this myth of falling behind in my own life in so many ways, for so many years, and literally turning 60 this year. I’m just beginning to Shed that feeling that I’m behind in my own life, and it is still a work in progress for me. So I want to offer here a different lens.
Jonathan Fields: [00:38:55] You don’t need a clean slate. You need an honest one. You need the you who has, who’s tried and stumbled and and and gotten back up. The you who has loved and lost and and then loved again. I mean the you who has, who has made choices that you’re proud of and choices you regret and is still here listening, which tells me everything I need to know. Right. You are not a project to be fixed in January and abandoned by February. You are a human in motion. The past. Use the ones you admire and the ones you’d rather forget. They’re not the obstacle to your future. They’re your greatest resource. So instead of Dragging quote old you out to the curb this year. Maybe invite them in. Ask yourself, what have you been trying to show me? What did you learn that I need to know? How can we really walk together into this next chapter? Because the only person who can step into the year ahead is the person you are right now with the history you actually have. So in our next episode, which airs, I believe it’s actually on January 1st. Next Thursday, we’re going to talk about something that I call the UN resolution. We’ll explore what it might look like to begin again without turning your life into a rigid list of rules or a test. You either pass or fail, and how to approach change in a way that works with your humanity instead of against it.
Jonathan Fields: [00:40:33] And then the week after that, we’ll dive into what I call the Year of Enough. And that conversation, it’s all about really what it means to live this coming year from a very different place internally, a sense that who you are and what you have right now can become the starting point for a rich and meaningful, a deeply satisfying life, rather than constantly feeling like you’re behind and not enough. And all of that is meant to sit alongside the more structural, practical work that we’ve done over the years with things like Success Scaffolding, which I may share with you further in the month or a little further into the first quarter. Right. Think of this as widening the foundation and softening the ground, so that any scaffolding you build has a solid, compassionate place to land as you step into this new year. Because we all need more solid ground beneath our feet and compassion to wrap ourselves in. But both of those upcoming episodes rest on this one. On your willingness right now as you close out this year to say I don’t need to erase myself to begin again. I can start from who I actually am and that is enough for the journey ahead. So as you move through these last days of the year, maybe skip the fantasy of the perfectly clean slate. Take the real one instead.
Jonathan Fields: [00:41:59] The one crowded with stories, lined with ink, smudged with tears and laughter. That’s the slate that can actually carry you into a life that feels true. So thanks for being here, for listening, for doing this inner work alongside me. I’m walking with you into this next year, and be sure to make sure that you are following along in whatever place that you get your podcasts so you do not miss the next two episodes. You’re definitely going to want to drink them in and enjoy how they’ll help us all. Set up the year to come, and I will see you here again next week. 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, and 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.