Happy New Year!
It’s filling all the corners of the internet. Greetings from
friends and people you bump into at the grocery store. It’s clogging our social
media and reminding us that this is truly a new
year.
I can’t believe how fast 2014 has gone. Those who said that the
older you get the faster time flies, weren’t lying as I always thought they
might have been. But 2015 is here. This much has proven true. Have you entered
the Carol or Genesis awards yet? If you haven’t, you really should. Let this
year be the year you don’t
procrastinate on your entry submission and keep the coordinators (aka: myself
and Pam) from hyperventilating over the details.
Have you laid out your goals? Picked your One Word? Set the New
Year’s resolution?
Can I encourage you to do one thing with your new year?
Pursue your dreams.
Finish your goals.
Complete what you started.
We think: New Year, how awesome! Let’s start something new.
But what if instead of starting something new that—let’s be
honest here—we most likely won’t finish in 2015 before May rolls around, we
finished what we have already started.
Are you putting off the edits? What is holding you back?
Insecurity? Fear?
Are you waiting to finish that book until the “right time”?
I’ll be brutally honest: that time is never going to show up unless you carve
it from the granite that is your schedule.
Are you holding off entering the contest because you’re
afraid that your book isn’t good enough to make it to the finals? I’ll ask you
this: what if it is? You don’t learn unless you put your best foot forward. And
sometimes that best yes is simply hitting “enter”.
New Years aren’t just an opportunity for the freshness of
new projects; it’s also the perfect opportunity to take a fresh start on
something you’ve been dragging your feet about.
Never has motivation run so clear and straight as it does in
the New Year.
What about motivation for this thing you’ve come to dread
you say? Thirty minutes a day on a project you loathe or simply tolerate will
get you far if you concentrate only on that project for the sole thirty
minutes. And you’re done. Move on to something you love or want to work with.
Provide yourself with rewards. A cookie, a chapter of the
book you are dying to finish, an extra five minutes in a warm, soothing bath,
an escape to your favorite coffee shop to people watch.
None of these things require money, but are things we often
deprive ourselves of enjoying. Use this as fuel.
Old projects don’t have to take a back seat in priority to
the projects you really want to work on, or vice versa. All you need is the
determination to make this project happen.
See, New Years are fresh, beautiful opportunities. Yes,
dream of the new idea, the next project, but don’t let the joy of starting
something new, let you forget the thing you loved and couldn’t wait to start
last year.
This could be the year that dream comes closer to coming
true.
***This beautiful post brought to you by Casey Herringshaw saving Amy Leigh Simpson's hyde!
This is powerful, you two! I keep seeing all these posts and quotes on FB about new starts in the new year, and while that is of course true, it always feels a bit artificial and simplistic to me. This, on the other hand, is an inspiring way to look at new opportunities... taking this time to refuel on old ones! I think we ALL have given up on or at least neglected heart projects for one reason or another--time, discouragement, maybe even finances or criticism. Let's be brave in 2015!
ReplyDeleteI agree, Ash! I so need to refuel! I really need to light a new fire under some of those same lingering dreams from 2014 and before still waiting in the wings! Loved this post! Casey is my hero!
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