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Personal Development

Before you start making your 2026 New Year’s Resolutions, consider these foundational principles

“Resolutions fail when they attempt to modify behaviour without interrogating the underlying cues.” Daniel Cole

Photographer: Rena

The transition into a new year is what psychologists call a temporal landmark, a cognitive boundary that separates our “past selves” from our “future selves.” This boundary often produces an emotional surge: optimism rises, confidence swells, and suddenly the impossible feels attainable. Researchers refer to this phenomenon as the Fresh Start Effect.

Yet while these emotional highs build momentum for action, they rarely sustain it. Goals may provide direction, but systems: our habits, routines, and behavioural patterns, provide traction. James Clear has rightfully said, “We don’t rise to the level of our goals; we fall to the level of our systems.”

Below are some of the reasons New Year’s resolutions fail, and what you should do before setting them.

Unrealistic expectations: Overreaching without infrastructure

Many resolutions fail because they demand abrupt behavioural overhauls without addressing the systems that maintain our current habits. Grand ambitions are intoxicating in January, but enthusiasm is a short-lived fuel. When progress isn’t immediate, discouragement replaces momentum.

A more sustainable approach is incremental improvement: building slowly, intentionally, and consistently. Goals should align with your existing life structure, not the idealized version of yourself you imagine in moments of excitement. Small, realistic steps compound over time, while drastic leaps often collapse under their own weight.

Lack of accountability: The illusion of self-sufficiency

A common misconception is that discipline is purely an individual exercise. In reality, people are far more consistent when they are accountable to others. Support systems: mentors, peers, colleagues, or trusted family members serve as stabilizers when motivation wanes.

Without accountability, we tend to fabricate internal narratives that justify inactivity, or regression. Accountability interrupts these narratives, grounding us in truth rather than excuses. As the Bible says in Ecclesiastes, “A cord of three strands is not easily broken.” Sustainable change is rarely a solo pursuit.

Habit and behavioural mechanics: Understanding the triggers behind actions

Human beings are fundamentally habitual creatures. Most of our behaviour is automated, cued by triggers and reinforced through reward loops. Thus, setting a resolution without understanding the behavioural mechanism behind it is akin to sailing without understanding wind currents.

For example, deciding to stop watching porn is commendable, but the more important question is: What triggers the behaviour? Is it boredom? Emotional fatigue? Loneliness? Stress? Environmental cues?

Resolutions fail when they attempt to modify behaviour without interrogating the underlying cues. Sustainable change requires replacing the habit loop, not merely resisting it.

The Japanese Kaizen philosophy captures this well: improvement through small, deliberate, and continuous steps. Profound transformation is seldom dramatic; it is cumulative.

Reflection, evaluation, and the discipline of adjustment

Most people set goals, but never revisit them. Reflection is not optional; it is structural to progress. Setting aside time every quarter to evaluate your journey provides clarity: What is working? What requires adjustment? What habits should be discarded, or reinforced?

Also, setting reward systems (even small ones) deepen habit formation through positive reinforcement. Celebrating progress keeps the journey enjoyable and increases the likelihood of sustaining it.

Flexibility: The antidote to rigidity

While discipline is essential, rigidity is counterproductive. Methods may need recalibration as circumstances shift. Openness to critique, feedback, and adaptation is a sign of maturity, not weakness.

As 2025 draws to an end, it is natural to feel both anticipation and uncertainty. Use this moment to extract meaningful lessons from the year behind you. Growth requires refinement.

A new year isn’t an invitation to abandon who you are and start from scratch. It is an opportunity to become more aligned with your values and vision. Rather than pursuing lofty, unsustainable ambitions, embrace consistent and purposeful action.

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