As the new year settles in, there’s often a quiet pressure to move forward quickly.
New goals.
New routines.
New expectations of who we should be now.
But before we rush into plans and resolutions, I want to invite you to pause – just for a moment.
Because the year we’ve just lived didn’t simply pass by.
It mattered.
All of it.
Taking a Breath Before Moving on
Imagine yourself at the end of this year.
You’re sitting quietly, maybe by a window, holding a warm cup of tea. There’s less urgency in your body than there used to be. Your shoulders aren’t quite so tense. You’re not rushing to fix or prove anything.
As you reflect, you realize something important:
You didn’t get here by pushing harder. You didn’t force clarity before it was ready. You didn’t reinvent yourself overnight.
Instead, you slowly learned to listen. You protected your energy more carefully. You became more intentional about where you said yes – and where you didn’t.
You allowed your life to fit you, rather than bending yourself to fit everything else.
Reflection question:
Where did you listen to yourself more this past year than you ever had before?
Honoring a Year That Asked a Lot
For many of us, the past year wasn’t easy. It stretched us in ways we didn’t anticipate. It asked us to adapt, to let go, and sometimes to grieve.
One of the deepest lessons I’ve learned – especially through love, loss, and grief – is this:
Grief and growth are not opposites. They are companions.
Loss has a way of clarifying what truly matters. It softens what no longer does. It reminds us that time, connection, and presence are far more valuable than perfection or productivity.
If you experienced loss this past year – of a loved one, a role, a dream, or even a version of yourself – you didn’t “fall behind.”
You were living.
Reflection question:
What did this year teach you about what truly matters most to you now?
A Different Question for the New Year
Instead of asking the familiar January questions – What should I change? What should I fix? What should I achieve? – consider asking something gentler and far more meaningful:
What would my future self want me to know right now?
When I asked myself that question, the answer wasn’t dramatic or overwhelming. It was simple, compassionate, and clear:
Trust yourself sooner. Say no without explanation. And don’t wait so long to choose joy.
Those words didn’t feel like pressure. They felt like permission.
Reflection question:
If your future self could give you one piece of advice today, what might she say?
A Simple Reflection You Can Try This Week
Here’s a quiet exercise you can try – no resolutions required.
Take a few minutes to imagine yourself one year from now. Picture how you feel in your body. Notice what feels lighter. Then write a short note from that future version of you to the woman you are today.
You might begin with:
“Dear Me, here’s what I want you to remember…”
You don’t need to write pages. Often, a single sentence holds exactly what we need.
To make this reflection easier, I created a gentle “Dear Future Me” worksheet that guides you through the process step by step. It’s designed to help you slow down, listen inward, and reconnect with your own wisdom – something we often neglect as women.
You can return to this worksheet any time during the year, especially when you feel uncertain or overwhelmed.
Reflection question:
What would it feel like to trust your inner voice just a little more this year?
Carrying the Wisdom Forward
As we move into this new year, it’s important to remember this:
We don’t step forward by erasing what shaped us.
We move forward by carrying its wisdom with us.
The lessons, the losses, the laughter, and even the moments that didn’t make sense at the time – they all contributed to who you are now.
So instead of asking yourself to become someone new this year, consider something softer:
- What do I want to protect?
- What do I want to release?
- What do I want to experience more fully?
Because this year mattered.
All of it.
And so do you.
Closing Reflection Questions
As you move through the coming weeks, you might return to these questions:
What am I ready to stop rushing? What feels meaningful to me now, in this season of life? What small step would my future self thank me for taking?
You don’t need all the answers today.
Sometimes, the most powerful way to begin a new year is by honoring the one that came before it – with compassion, honesty, and grace.
Please leave a comment with your reflection questions and how you see this year unfolding for you.