Dori Moreno, a growth strategist specialising in the development of individuals, teams, and businesses, says that every January she sees the same pattern: good intentions crash into unrealistic lists and harsh self‑judgement. Here she explains that people don’t fail because they lack discipline, but because most of them are measuring themselves the wrong way.
We all know the phrase: “New year, new me.” In business and in life, setting resolutions feels like the right way to move forward, doesn’t it? But often the pressure we attach to these resolutions ends up holding us back before we can even get going.
Many of us head into January focusing on the goals we didn’t hit or the milestones we missed. The obvious fix is to make a new list of resolutions. Unfortunately, this list often demands an overnight makeover, drilling us to change everything at once if we have any hope of success. This thinking immediately turns growth into some sort of personal punishment. And the reality is, when a plan is built on guilt, momentum simply doesn’t stand a chance.
Why do resolutions rarely make it out of the starting gate? The answer lies in how we frame them. A single skipped gym session, for example, becomes a full-on wellness failure. We miss a task, and suddenly, we never follow through on anything. January is notorious for this. Instead of feeling guilt, how about we take the learning that lists and resolutions don’t create change; design does.
I often talk about setting a personal strategy to turn intention into structure. It is the difference between “I will be healthy” and “I will drink water first thing, walk at lunch, and sleep before 10.” Strategy addresses the behaviour head-on and guilt-free, putting it in time and space, and taking away the negative feelings that make good intentions crumble. It also removes that pressure driven by dates. You can begin in March, July, or September. You are not late; you are ready when you decide to be ready.
So how do you build momentum without pressure?
See your goals as investments
Think about the future that you’re funding. For health, invest more in energy, sleep, and recovery. For money, set a strategy for stable spending instead of impulsive buying. Treating your goals like assets means you protect them and give them time because they matter, not because you feel guilty.
Be accountable
Accountability doesn’t mean someone watches your every move; it’s the support you get when you share your plan with someone you trust, check in regularly, keep it short, celebrate progress, and adjust what’s not working. A friend, colleague, or coach can help you stay consistent.
Design small rituals
Anchor your habits in your day-to-day living. Have a glass of water before coffee, take a breather before replying to tough emails, and put your running shoes by the bed at night. These micro‑rituals are powerful ways to turn intention into action and will go a long way to lifting that mental load.
Watch your words
What we say quickly turns into what we do. Consciously swap “I have to” for “I choose to.” Instead of “I failed, how about saying “I missed today, I’ll try again tomorrow.” Language can either build pressure or give you space to breathe. You’ll be surprised how it can change your daily reality.
Stay human
Growth is rarely linear. Sometimes we need intensity, other times recovery. Permit yourself to adjust your pace because long-term change comes from how you think, regulate, and choose, not just what you push yourself to do.
Of course, resolutions can be a useful prompt; it’s great to get your intentions down on paper. But they are not the be-all and end-all blueprint of success. If you want momentum in 2026, embrace the idea of mindfully and kindly designing the conditions in which you can grow. The result will not be a perfect year, but it will be a steady one. And steady is what lasts.
