We’re
now five days into the New Year and I’m happy to say I’ve been sticking to my
resolutions with relative ease. I made three resolutions for 2013:
1)
Write daily
2)
Meditate regularly
3)
Be kind to myself
These are personal goals I’ve had for a while but have had
trouble sticking with for one reason or another. I figured a brand new year was
a perfect time to change my habits. I spent the last couple weeks of December
thinking about my goals and ways to go about meeting them and I feel The
Universe has given me some hints that I’m headed in the right direction.
On New Year’s Day, I was in the
mall (working on #3) when I came across a video game for my Xbox Kinect called
“Deepak Chopra’s LEELA: mind, body, spirit, play”. At first glance it seemed
cheesy (a meditation game? How is that even a thing?) but it was cheap and I
decided to give it a try. I’ve played it a little each day and so far it seems
neat. I haven’t had a change to unlock all the features but it provides me with
time and space to settle my mind and that’s what I needed most.
Later that same afternoon I
was browsing in a bookstore. I
wasn’t even looking for a writing book when I saw A Writer’s Book of Days by Judy Reeves and knew I had stumbled across something big. I’ve been looking for
something similar for a long time and had even bought a couple other writing
books but hadn’t found one that felt like the right fit. The book is a writing
coach of sorts, providing advice, information and suggestions on how to make
writing a priority in your life. What I thought was so great is that it is
designed to give a year’s worth of guidance with one chapter for each month,
breaking the information down into catergories and most important to me, it
gives daily writing prompts that already have me writing about things outside
of my normal comfort zone.
My third resolution is the hardest.
The first two are straight forward, physical actions but being kind to
yourself? Most people probably think they already do that. I know I thought I
was. About half way through 2012, I started seeing a life coach and so far this
one of the biggest realizations I’ve had during our work together. It’s
interesting because I consider myself a kind person. I’m thoughtful and
compassionate when it comes to other people and to animals but it seems I’m
also pretty good at beating myself up. I’m starting to see how much time I’ve
wasted “shoulding myself”, as I like to call it. I should keep my house clear, I should work out more, weigh less, be better at roller
skating. I can’t even imagine how much time I’ve spent dwelling on just those
issues alone, then add in my worries about my job, relationships, finances,
etc. I’m never doing exactly what
I think I should be and it’s exhausting- no wonder I’m so tired all the time!
Becoming aware of this has been a huge breakthrough for me and becoming aware
is a first step to initiating change but after spending thirty-some years in a
specific pattern, it’s though to know where to start to be different.
So I guess maybe that’s the sum of
all my resolutions for this year: to work on being different, changing my
patterns. I’ve already started and noticing change is the biggest motivator for
making more. Because it’s really a big process and I’m proud of the fact that
I’m even doing it.
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