One of my most favorite things is the hope and optimism of a fresh, new year. I love the focus on goal setting, the crisp new planners, the beautiful vision boards we fill with dreams. It's exciting to look at the blank space of a new year, to meditate on my spiritual growth and what I'd like to learn, to analyze my daily habits and find places where a little more discipline might make a lot more difference.
In those moments, self-awareness leaves ego behind and becomes a practice of intentional living—where personal accountability without shame teaches us how to build better habits with more consistency. This is where we overcome all-or-nothing thinking, in favor of a slow growth mindset nurtured by gentle discipline. Because we've all wondered why resolutions fail, and I think we've all stumbled across the answer without taking time to think about what it really means.
Because the truth is, resolutions fail when we do. And big goals don't mean anything without follow through. It doesn't matter how much we want to lose weight if we never take care of our bodies. It doesn't matter how much we want to travel if we don't make room in our budgets. It doesn't matter how deeply we're longing for sustainable personal growth if we're looking for growth after burnout and still refusing to make room for rest.
Our efforts will never seem meaningful until we learn to choose progress over perfection and consistency over motivation.
I know, I know. "Easier said than done," right? Building consistency over time sounds great until you lose your habit streak and that failure opens the door to disappointment. Learning to follow through feels like the answer to every missed milestone and the solution to every unfinished task...until it requires showing up when motivation fades.
But small habits can change your life—even when they feel too small to matter. Even when you miss a day. Or two. Or five. You don't need bigger, better goals. And you don't need to become a better person overnight to achieve the goals you've set. What you need is to rebuild trust in yourself, stick to it even if it takes longer than you wanted it to...and quit quitting.
We had been church friends for a while. We'd cross paths on Sunday mornings, exchange tidbits from the passing week. I'd compliment her fabulous outfits, she'd ask about my kids. Eventually, we were sharing parenting tips, scheduling conflicts, and personal testimonies.
One day we were chatting about how overwhelming life can be, and she shared a personal struggle with a health problem. "I don't want people to know because I don't want it to change the way they see me," she said. And I told her that I understood. Because I'm disabled.
At first she looked almost doubtful—which is perfectly understandable, because on the outside, I look fine. I've got two functioning legs, my back is relatively straight, and most days I can safely ignore my neurosurgeon's recommendation to use a cane. I usually show up on time (give or take ten minutes), frazzled but prepared, and I participate actively wherever I choose to go.
As the conversation went on, her eyes got wider and wider. Because while I may have two functioning legs, I can't feel the bottoms of my feet. My back may be straight, but it's damaged and deformed at various points all the way from top to bottom. And I may get away with leaving my cane at home but it's only because I walk slow, tending to my balance, protecting my feet with flat-soled, closed-toe shoes. And I did it all while corralling, parenting, and attentively caring for two chronically ill kids, mostly by myself. Constant doctor's appointments. Frequent surgeries. Occasional hospital stays. Car troubles, life troubles. Spiritual growth. Trauma healing.
It's almost funny now, to look back on that moment. I did understand what she meant when she said she didn't want her health to change the way people saw her value and capability.
But as she stepped back, in beautiful heels and a sparkly tutu fluffed as much with personality as it was with taffeta and tulle, I realize maybe I didn't understand after all. Because she didn't pity the hardship I was walking through. She didn't fill her big brown eyes with sorrow for my struggle.
Instead, she shook her head, flaming red hair swung back to showcase dangly beaded earrings, and she said, "I don't know how you do it."
At the time, the best answer I had was a laugh, because in those days, the real answer would have been, "I don't have a choice." The dishes needed cleaning, the floor needed mopping, the laundry needed folding, the children needed raising. And I was all I had—so I shoved myself through each day with a dash of hope, a collection of whispered prayers, and a bloodstream that was probably 50% caffeine.
She and I don't cross paths on Sundays anymore because her family moved and they go to a different church now. I don't see her crazy beautiful fashion statements all that often, and she's not there to see me rush into the lobby with tired eyes and my daily jolt of caffeination.
Our friendship is mostly over the phone these days, where we still share parenting tips, commiserate over the challenges of our lives and families, walk each other through spiritual struggles—and trade tips on the healing habits, spiritual practices, and daily disciplines that keep us growing.
What's amazing is that everything in both of our lives is different now, even though nothing seems different at all. Because what we see in each other isn't struggle vs. strength or challenge vs. capability. It's consistency. We've chosen to show up for our hobbies, our children, our careers, and our goals over and over again. Even when it was hard. Even when it was exhausting. Even when we were probably overcaffeinated and definitely underprepared, and every step felt like slogging through the quicksand of our childhood nightmares.
Not because we felt especially capable. But because life demands follow-through.
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The point is, sometimes it's too easy to let our big goals feel too big or our big dreams seem outlandish. Sometimes we don't feel confident enough to accomplish what we're hoping for—and sometimes we don't even try because we don't feel worthy.
But I think the biggest thing we overlook when we talk about growth is that discipline isn't just about becoming stronger or overcoming more. We don't need magical moments of inspiration. Most of the time, we just need to plant our feet and keep standing when we feel like falling down, or take that next small step even when it seems too ordinary to make much difference.
When no one applauded, I couldn't keep the streak going, and I had no visible results to make my efforts seem worth the work, the habits that carried me weren't impressive ones. They were just there, each one as meaningless as a lonely brick on a patch of grass.
It wasn't until one brick covered another...and another...and another...that the faithful stacking of small daily habits built a life that looked resilient on the outside, no matter how fragile it felt. And it wasn't until I stepped back to look at my life with compassion and respect for the versions of me that built it, that I truly learned what it means to...
It's normal to feel like life is too hectic, but this is a problem with a simple answer: show up, streamline, and simplify. One way I'm doing this? I'm looking more closely at what I take in during the day. No more mindless scrolling. So if you're working on that too, let me invite you to my Substack roundup—it's a once-weekly email that gives you links to all the best of my content, writing updates, sneak peeks at my life behind the scenes, and more!
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