Here are the ways to achieve your New Year’s resolution

Most of us start a year with lots of ambitions and to-do list… some gets their aims spot on while others fail to make it. Life is full of twists and turns. This is something everyone should learn by heart.

According to Laura Berman Fortgang, life coach and author of Living Your Best Life, “You set such goals every year, your New Year’s resolutions rarely stick. In fact, 23 percent of us break them in a week and 45 percent by the end of the month.”

Choosing the right goal and the right approach are the keys to resolution success.

Here are the six simple steps and make this the year your New Year’s resolutions last through December.

 

Pick a goal that excites you

“The biggest mistake people make is picking the wrong goal in the first place,” says Talane Miedaner, author of Coach Yourself to Success. “Never set goals that are over a year old, because they’re ‘dead.” Losing weight is a perfect example some people carry that around for decades. “If you still want to slim down after years of trying, then do something different,” she says. “Sign up with a running group and train for a marathon, or take ballroom dancing lessons and enter a dance competition.”

Go for a master plan

Your master plan will decide what you actually want to achieve in your life. Maybe you’ll have to wake up an hour earlier to write your best-selling novel, or spend one lunch hour a week volunteering with a nonprofit organization. “To succeed, you have to schedule your goals and make them part of your life,” advises Fortgang. “Put a system in place that will support change by giving you the structure you need.”

Time to take baby steps

“When you break your goal down into smaller parts, it becomes more controllable, less daunting and more attainable,” says Christa Wagner, professional organizer and owner of Savvy Solutions. Lofty goals often feel overwhelming, which leads to procrastination and incompletion. Wagner uses her own life as an example: “I have about 10 books I want to write. To reach my goal in six months, I’ve broken it down into daily and weekly tasks”

Call in the reinforcements

“Get supportive folks in your camp,” advises Fortgang. ” Join a group of like-minded folks, team up with a good friend, hire a coach or otherwise include people who want the best for you and will keep you on track ” If you know someone with a similar goal or any goal at all invite her to be an accountability buddy.

Stay focused

” I keep my goals on my wall, at my desk and in my planner,” says Wagner. “This allows me to check into them often, make adjustments, and check goals off my list. I always know where I’m going.” Vision boards, maps, lists and pictures that embody success will keep you motivated.

Don’t forget to reward yourself

For motivation and staying focus, you must appreciate youself. “I reward myself monthly with a pedicure and quarterly with a massage,” says Wagner. “It keeps me rejuvenated and energized.” If you want to lose 20 pounds, for example, don’t wait until you’ve lost it all to celebrate. “If you reward yourself with something that makes you feel beautiful each time you shed a few pounds, you’re more likely to achieve your end goal.”

 

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