What Have I Done?

Happy New Year—

Back so soon and once again here I am, trying to ignore the ingrained feeling that I should think about the year ahead and make some resolutions. 

I’ve posted before about how I used to come up with eighteen resolutions every New Year’s Eve. Three in each of six different categories. I know… it’s embarrassing! My only defence is that it gave me a purposeful glow and for those few hours each year I felt in control of my life. 

Then two years ago I wrote that I had at last recognised the folly of all those broken promises to myself and was planning instead to focus on a couple of themes for the coming year. Balance maybe. Nuance? Trains? Being kinder? All flexible and open to interpretation. But I quickly realised that even this tame affair was too controlled. So I decided I would just get on with trying to enjoy things for their own sake. No goals. 

As an approach it’s gone quite well and I’ve managed not to make any New Year resolutions for some time now. It’s a kind of anti-achievement. Nonetheless however much I try to eschew the idea of commitments the start of a fresh new year does feel symbolic. It’s an opportunity for something. So this January I’ve turned my previous habits upside-down and instead of thinking about the year ahead, I’ve thought back over the past year. Rather than making it about what I want to do, it’s about what I’ve done. Given the speed with which past resolutions have crumbled and got forgotten, it’s vastly more reliable. It’s interesting, too, because there’s an element of surprise. 

Last year brought quite a few things that evolved without much planning, and which turned out to be enjoyable and worthwhile. I visited new places, read satisfying books, spent happy times with friends and family, and did some more coastal walking. Those things were all individual events but meanwhile behind the scenes other less definable, diffuse goings-on were having a significant impact. Two in particular, were important although they would never have made it onto my resolutions list because I wasn’t aware of their value until I lived them. 

One was discovering that I don’t care what other people think, anything like as much as I used to. I don’t know how that happened. But it did. I became aware of it earlier in the year when I had to give a talk and realised that for the first time ever, I didn’t feel tortured by self-doubt. I gave it my best and hoped that some people would like it and find it interesting. But I also knew there was a chance that some people would find it boring or even irritating. It’s just the way it is. You can’t please all the people all the time. I’ve got a friend who says she can’t stand David Attenborough. Yes, David Attenborough. Even Jane Austen—St Jane— hasn’t captured all hearts. Mark Twain thought her “…entirely impossible. It seems a great pity to me that they allowed her to die a natural death. Every time I read Pride and Prejudice I want to dig her up and hit her over the skull with her own shinbone.”  

The development of my insouciance has been invisible to all but me but it has had a physical manifestation—it’s coincided with a change of hairstyle. For my entire adult life, I’ve peered out through a fringe and much of my face has been hidden behind it. My forehead has not been seen for decades but earlier this year, quite out of the blue, I decided that I’m through with that. I want to look at the world with less fear and accept how others see me, for better or for worse. At the moment every day is a bad hair day as my former fringe is growing out and can’t seem to sit happily in any position. It’s anyone’s guess where my parting will end up but despite knowing that my hair looks a bit weird and dishevelled, I really don’t care. It’s a symbol of my new mindset.  

The second thing that took me by surprise this year, is living through a creative block. If you’ve read this blog before then you might remember that for about four months, I lost all interest in writing despite being part-way through my third book. Somehow I managed not to panic. I even accepted that I might never write again and found myself thinking about that famous line from the Serenity Prayer—“grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” Then one week in July, as unexpectedly as it had disappeared, the desire to write returned. From that point on, I whizzed along and by the end of November the book was more or less finished. It’s currently with an editor. 

Once this stage is done, I’ll decide what to do next. No goals. No expectations. 

I’ll let you know what happens. 

8 thoughts on “What Have I Done?

  1. Thank you Lynn for another refreshing read. Revisiting the past helps shape the future and I enjoyed reading about what was momentous for you in 2024. Mind set changes, intangible and yet impactful. To 2025!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I totally relate to the Resolutions challenge. My twin sister and I decided resolutions were too hard; every year we set ourselves up to fail, so settled for the kinder, softer sounding Intentions last year and theme, not goal oriented.
    Looking back at 2024 to establishes the baseline exactly as you say, so with gratitude and positivity, onwards we go. Happy New Year!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Another thoughtful piece, Lynn and I’m really looking forward to the product of the creative blockage clearance! 😄

      Like

  3. Thought-provoking as ever! I too decided to pass on the resolutions last year. Just as well, it was a year full of surprises that would have thoroughly upended any idea of making progress on fitness, or tidiness, or getting better at any of the numerous hobbies I hold dear. A very unwell other half for the first part of 2024, followed by a rather unwell me in the second has made me realise that standing still in life is no bad thing. Appreciating where you are and what you have are much underrated: being alive and being healthy need to be enjoyed in the moment. The only goal I have for this year is to be glad of where I am and what I have – the rest can be a pleasant addition: nice but not really necessary.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. thanks, as always, lynn…thought-provoking, evocative and simply you! i have given up on both looking forward and looking back. my commitment is to living into the present moment as fully as i can. while i understand the value of both when the year turns, i remind myself that december 31/january 1 are simply dates, like all others. they are, in truth, constructions that happily assist us in living in our culture…important, but fictions nonetheless. this is a somewhat radical approach, though i find it helps me survive the madness around me at this time of year. breathing into the turn of the year at winter solstice makes more sense to me. i can see the days shortening and lengthening, as did our ancestors. thanks again, lynn for your authenticity and your sensitivity.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Really interesting as always, Lynn, and I do like the thought that you’re no longer concerned about what people think of you. I too have given up on New Year resolutions.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to gimmamacpherson Cancel reply