“New year, new me” and New Year’s resolutions. Some hate them, some love them. I, personally, never had a problem with these ideas: tweaking my personality or setting goals. Yet, so many people disregard and mock these mantras.
Many people joke “New year, same me,” and while I understand that you should be who you are, that doesn’t mean that you don’t have anything to change about your habits. Last time I checked, there is no such thing as a perfect person. No one is liked by everyone. Some might be thinking, “If there is no such thing as a perfect person, then why do I have to change?” There may never be a way to reach the peak of perfection, however, you can always strive to be the best you can possibly be.
It’s not just personality, I bet on my life that everybody has procrastinated at least once in their life. If this is a quality you think is fine to maintain for the rest of your life, then by all means, continue disregarding the saying.
Many argue and wonder why wait for the new year to set goals. I mean sure, you can start in June and finish May of next year, it’s the same length as starting in January and ending in December. Though, when December rolls around, those who started in January are done, while people who started in June are only half way. Plus, making resolutions on New Year—a day meant for making them—keeps a tradition that's meaningful and real.
This mantra plants a seed in your head that this is a clean slate where you can start over from scratch. You pull out all those weeds of the impoliteness and thoughtless moments from last year and plant new seeds of politeness and knowledgeable qualities into your garden of personalities for 2020. Every year, I make a New Year’s resolution to be nicer and less aloof, but it only lasts me a couple of days. However, I’m working on that this year to make it last longer than a couple of days. You should try it out, it’s not as bad as everyone makes it seem.
Many people joke “New year, same me,” and while I understand that you should be who you are, that doesn’t mean that you don’t have anything to change about your habits. Last time I checked, there is no such thing as a perfect person. No one is liked by everyone. Some might be thinking, “If there is no such thing as a perfect person, then why do I have to change?” There may never be a way to reach the peak of perfection, however, you can always strive to be the best you can possibly be.
It’s not just personality, I bet on my life that everybody has procrastinated at least once in their life. If this is a quality you think is fine to maintain for the rest of your life, then by all means, continue disregarding the saying.
Many argue and wonder why wait for the new year to set goals. I mean sure, you can start in June and finish May of next year, it’s the same length as starting in January and ending in December. Though, when December rolls around, those who started in January are done, while people who started in June are only half way. Plus, making resolutions on New Year—a day meant for making them—keeps a tradition that's meaningful and real.
This mantra plants a seed in your head that this is a clean slate where you can start over from scratch. You pull out all those weeds of the impoliteness and thoughtless moments from last year and plant new seeds of politeness and knowledgeable qualities into your garden of personalities for 2020. Every year, I make a New Year’s resolution to be nicer and less aloof, but it only lasts me a couple of days. However, I’m working on that this year to make it last longer than a couple of days. You should try it out, it’s not as bad as everyone makes it seem.