An Interview With You
Instead of just listing the same old resolutions, consider asking yourself some pointed questions about the goals that matter to you.
Instead of just listing the same old resolutions, consider asking yourself some pointed questions about the goals that matter to you.
We’ve been taught that following through on new year’s resolutions is all about willpower. But it turns out that willingness may be a far more valuable ally.
It took years, and more than one medical scare, for LaDawn Riggs to move beyond good intentions and yo-yo dieting. But once she did, the results were life changing.
Bring your grandest dreams and goals into reality using simple words and pictures.
How-to guidance from a trainer for setting achievable goals. Plus, her top eight tips for lasting success.
Our fitness editor harnesses the energy of summer to tackle new goals.
We think a broader collection of farmers, policy-makers, and eaters need new, bigger resolutions for fixing the food system — real changes with long-term impacts in fields, boardrooms, and on plates all over the world.
The older I get, the more I find myself focusing on what is rather than what may be.
Consider these simple tips from our experts to help you make progress toward your healthy goals.
Experience Life‘s editor in chief talks about resolution abandonment and how to truly approach health and well-being.
Moving past aesthetic goals during resolution season is possible, if you explore what true happiness means to you.
Zowie! Ever since the last issue lit a fire under me (Jan./Feb., Action Plan 2004), I’ve been on kind of an action rampage.
On Thursday, I posted about boosting my immune system. A bad cold virus has been circulating in Twin Cities offices and day-care centers, and I wasn’t about to let the…
There is no better way to expand willingness, I find, than by constantly expanding your knowledge and perspectives.
Thinking about making some positive changes in the coming year? Here’s how to set yourself up for success — and a feel-good experience.
Never been one to quit? Maybe you should give it a try! If you’re drowning in a sea of commitments, a little constructive quitting could do you a world of good.
Last year, I made a weird resolution. I guess it was typical in one respect – that it was intended to end a bad habit and thereby improve my life. But it was also a little odd in that the resolution only pertained to the conversations in my head. I made no commitment to change any of my outward behaviors.
It’s resolutions season again – a time of review and reflection, and for many, a time of frustration. We may find ourselves facing some of the same issues we faced last year and the year before. And not all of them have improved with age.
Take an experimental approach to your New Year’s resolutions and discover some exhilarating new possibilities.
Experience Life‘s editor in chief on the problem with all-or-nothing resolutions — and how to set intentions for the New Year.