New Year, New You?

Ah, New Year’s Day—the ultimate “fresh start.”

There’s something magnetic about the idea of a clean slate, a chance to leave behind the mistakes of the past and step into something new. It’s why so many of us set resolutions like:

I’m going to stop eating junk food.

I’m going to stop being lazy.

I’m going to stop wasting time.

But here’s the problem with most resolutions: they’re built on subtraction. Take away the “bad” stuff, and everything will be better, right?

Not quite.

When you frame change as removal, it puts your focus on what’s missing. It’s like telling your brain, Here’s a list of all the things you can’t have anymore. No wonder it feels like deprivation.

This year, what if you flipped the script? What if you made your resolutions about adding to your life instead of taking things away?

Here’s what that could look like:

• Instead of “Stop eating junk food,” try “Add more colorful, satisfying meals to my day.”

• Instead of “Stop being lazy,” try “Add one 10-minute walk to my routine.”

• Instead of “Stop wasting time,” try “Add 15 minutes each day to focus on something that matters to me.”

See the difference?

Addition feels expansive. It gives you more to work with, not less. It shifts your focus to growth, possibility, and abundance.

And here’s the secret: When you focus on adding good things, the “bad” stuff often falls away naturally. You don’t have to obsess over cutting it out—it just becomes less important.

So, on this first day of the year, I invite you to reflect on one simple question:

What do I want to add to my life this year?

Not what you want to remove. Not what you want to “fix.” But what you want to invite in.

Addition over subtraction. Expansion over restriction. Growth over perfection.

This is how change becomes sustainable. This is how you make a resolution that lasts.

Here’s to a year of addition, abundance, and everything that helps you move forward.

Happy New Year,

Jeb

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The Concept of Wholeness: You Were Never Broken

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Why Perfection is the Enemy of Progress