New Year's gets a bad rap.
I think it's because there's plenty of things that are involved with the holiday that people could *potentially* hate, so odds are there's something about New Year's you're not going to like. The persuasive argument for me is that it reminds people of a popularity contest: where are you going? Who are you with? What are you wearing? Oh, *you're staying in and going to bed early?* I *guess* that's fun!
People hate it. I can see why.
But taking the party out of New Year's, I've always liked the idea of having a time to try new things: think less resolution and more let's throw things against the wall and see what sticks. So here's what I'm throwing against the wall in 2018:
I hear most of you: "you've got a new baby, where is all of this time coming from?" That brings me to what I think is the crucial piece that most people leave out when doing new resolutions: *what exactly are you giving up in order to fit these new things in your life?*
Time is as zero-sum of a game as exists. So to do this new stuff, here's what I'm planning on giving up:
Now, I understand that "stop wasting times so I can to do more stuff" sounds a lot like the Republican tax plan banking on insane economic growth to not grow the deficit. Maybe it is. Just like Congress: we're throwing things against the wall and seeing what sticks, remember?
This reads like the opposite of what most people resolve to do in the new year, but I'm still going to try to do the normal stuff: exercise regularly, eat better, etc. But if I'm forced to sum all of this up as a New Year's Resolution, it's this: in 2018, I want to be more intentional with my time.