You're Wrong About The New Year

Why Does Every New Year Come With The Same Pressure To Reinvent Ourselves?

Every time the calendar flips back to January, we start to feel the urge to “become better.” We write resolution lists, join gyms, pick up new hobbies—convinced that this will finally be the year everything changes.

But by the time January ends, we’re nowhere closer to who we wanted to become.

The gym memberships sit unused. The paintbrushes dry out, half-cleaned, forgotten. And somehow, we always blame ourselves for it.

But maybe it isn’t a lack of discipline.

Maybe it’s conditioning.

Why Is The New Year The Only Time To Try?

The new year arrives with a strange sense of permission. Promises of clean slates and fresh starts hang in the air.

Wanting to grow, to change, to do better isn’t a flaw. That’s not a problem; that’s being human.

The problem begins when we’re told that change has a deadline—
that with the new year, all our dreams are supposed to come true overnight.

What Do We Lose When Growth Becomes a Deadline?

Bettering ourselves isn’t about how fast we can do it. We’re people—not machines or algorithms. 

The person we’re trying to become isn’t a distant version of ourselves waiting at the finish line.

Growth isn’t an arrival; 

it’s the life we live while getting there. 

It’s in the conversations we have, the routines we build, the small choices we make every day. It’s in moving forward imperfectly, instead of standing still out of fear that we’re not changing fast enough.

When we try to barricade ourselves into rigid timelines, we end up blocking our own growth. 

Does Growth Really Need An Audience?

Every January, the phrase “new year, new me” is everywhere—on screens, in conversations, in the quiet pressure we put on ourselves to prove that we’re changing. But how much of it actually feels real? And how much of it is just meant to be seen?

We want our growth to be visible. Measurable. Impressive. Something we can point to and say, look—I’m better now.

But real change is rarely that neat. It’s slow and unglamorous. It doesn’t announce itself. And it definitely doesn’t fit into a before-and-after post.

We want to believe we’re transforming—from caterpillars into butterflies—but the cocoon we build isn’t always personal. Sometimes, it’s performative.

What If Growth Isn’t Meant to Be Proved?

Ultimately, growth is your own road to walk—not something to hand over to calendars, timelines, and other people’s expectations.

But we started measuring progress by how visible it was, how fast it moved, how well it could be explained.

The truth, is that growth was never meant to be a performance. 

It doesn’t need an audience, and it doesn’t need permission from January to begin. 

It can be quiet. 

It can be slow. 

It can exist without proof.

Because real growth isn’t about becoming someone new at all. Maybe it’s about choosing to keep living, learning, and changing—quietly, and on our own terms.


Comments

  1. Good stuff genuinely a great read

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  2. I love how you always find the right words to describe those feelings, it just feels right reading this, I can relate to it

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    Replies
    1. Thank you so much! That's why it took me ten days into the new year to post this haha, trying to find just the perfect words! :3

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  3. Wow loved it!!!! It's so relatable, amazing work

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