A Solid Foundation For Your Best Life
February 2020
|Psychologies
What can we do when our goals seem too lofty and float out of reach? Anita Chaudhuri asks the experts how to go back to basics and establish an effective new beginning through positive practical habits
-
Usually, this is my favourite time of year. The ritual of gathering a pristine notebook and a rainbow of felt-tipped pens, plus magazines, scissors and glue never grows old. Creating a vision board and writing down my most cherished hopes and dreams for the upcoming 12 months has always been inspiring but, after an action-packed year, I feel strangely underwhelmed by the idea. While I’ve been busy on lots of projects, I haven’t made as much progress as I had hoped. Why should 2020 be any different?
This jaundiced mindset is abruptly refreshed when I read a passage by poet David Whyte from his new book Consolations (Canongate, £14.99). ‘It is always hard to believe that the courageous step is so close to us, that it is closer than we ever could imagine, that in fact, we already know what it is, and that the step is simpler, more radical than we had thought: which is why we so often prefer the story to be more elaborate, our identities clouded by fear, the horizon safely in the distance, the essay longer than it needs to be and the answer safely in the realm of impossibility.’
Am I in danger of making the vision for my future too grandiose, overcomplicating things that could in fact be simple? I go on a quest to find out and, in so doing, discover five basic ingredients for making lasting change in the here and now.
1 CREATE STRUCTURE
Looking back over the past year, I realise that my biggest problem is that I set big, shiny goals for myself without fully understanding the way to achieve them. There is a trope among self-development gurus that urges us to focus on the ‘what’ and the ‘how’ will happen, as if by magic. Clearly, that doesn’t always work. In search of advice about how to structure my goals, I turn to behavioural scientist BJ Fogg, director of the Stanford Behavior Design Lab. His book,
هذه القصة من طبعة February 2020 من Psychologies.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Psychologies
Psychologies UK
Your confidence renewal plan
As the pressure to 'begin again' reaches its peak, many of us feel anything but ready. Sally Saunders discovers why confidence dips — and how small acts can help us rise again.
4 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
HERBAL WISDOM to help you enjoy a calmer brighter new year
Ever made yourself a cup of soothing chamomile tea to help you sleep, or had fresh mint tea after a meal to aid digestion? If so, you're already familiar with the benefits of common herbal remedies.
5 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
Janette Manrara
The Strictly dancer feared losing her identity and career by having a baby - but says it's brought her unexpected personal and professional fulfilment.
2 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
Inventing a new way to understand ourselves
Kim's client Alice reveals her artistic side - and the 'new language' she has created to help her make sense of her beautiful brain.
3 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
OTHER PEOPLE'S STRESS...isn't yours to carry
Whether you're at home or work, visiting with friends or catching up with family, the start of the year can stir up old emotions and leave us feeling a little off-kilter. Because New Year's stress doesn't just come from the dark, the weather or even the lack of cash - it's also from the people around us.
7 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
Don't fear the D-WORD
While most of us associate this month with fresh starts — new routines, dry spells, gym sign-ups — those who work in the relationship world call it something far more sobering: divorce month. And for good reason.
4 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
HARMONY at home
We spend weeks preparing our homes for Christmas...but does anyone prepare for when it's over? You know the feeling: the decorations have come down, the mince pies have been eaten, but your home doesn't feel like it's supporting you into the new year. I believe this is because our homes hold energetic residue.
5 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
THE BALLET OF BECOMING: Gracefully navigating life's pitfalls
Sometimes staying grounded and dancing with the system can transform even our hardest moments...
3 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
The Science of Wellbeing: Forget willpower, try tapping into this inbuilt superpower for greater health
Each month, Ali Roff Farrar explores the deep and mysterious realms of psychology and neuroscience, to help us understand and reach greater levels of wellbeing in body and mind...
2 mins
January 2026
Psychologies UK
MOVING FROM GUILT TO GRACE
How many times a day do you hear yourself saying sorry? ‘Sorry, could I just…?’ ‘Sorry, I can’t make it tonight.’ ‘Sorry, I’m not free.’ We apologise for taking up space, for saying no, for changing our minds, even for wanting something different. Sometimes it just slips out before you’ve even had time to check if it belongs there.
8 mins
January 2026
Translate
Change font size

