Last week, I wrote about how much I enjoy reflection around the turn of the year. This year, I am especially reflective because I am also about to start a role at a new firm. When identity is shifting, it is normal to consider the past and reevaluate goals for the future.
Many of my friends have been sharing their "words of the year" or "in and out lists" on social media. Though I enjoyed seeing my friends' thoughts , I felt a bit at a loss about what to make of this for myself. How do I pick a word or theme of the year when I am heading into something new and have no idea what the future would hold?
Step 1: Start Where You Are.
As I do in many other things, I decided to start exactly where I was. Over the last few weeks, I have been struggling a bit. Though I am ecstatic about the new opportunity, I was struggling to feel excited. Of course, any new role is bound to inspire nerves, but that wasn't my problem.
My struggle was letting go of the past. I kept thinking of the past year, the ways in which it was hard, and the mistakes I had made. As a perfectionist overthinker, it occurred to me that this struggle often resulted from my patterned thinking.
I attended an event this week where I finally gave voice to this feeling. The group was sharing our word or theme of the year and I announced during my turn that I needed help selecting a word. I said "what's the word for getting rid of the good girl voice in your head? That's my word."
Step 2: Look for Clues about What You Need.
Condolences and commiseration was offered and ideas where shared, but a single word did not reveal itself to me. I then posed the same question in a post on LinkedIn. Some people offered funny comments that made me smile. A few offered words like "liberation", "fearless" and "empowerment."
Those are good words but they felt too heavy and could lead back into the striving and perfectionism with which I had been struggling. But a few people suggested that being a good girl isn't a bad thing and wondered about a less aggressive way of approaching the problem.
That is a fair point. Sure, I get frustrated with my "good girl" voice a lot because she judges and pushes me hard. But she has led me to some good things, like founding this blog and writing two books for instance. Moreover, I have learned that sitting with some "undesirable" tendencies, like anger, is actually the best way to prevent them from causing harm.
Asking for Help Is Good but Stay Focused on What You Need
Is there a middle way when it comes to the "good girl" voice that causes me so much suffering? To answer this question, I put on my "mom" hat. I am the mom of two little girls. I know for a fact that they want to be good but they sometimes get ornery, fight, argue, and get mean and nasty. As a mom, I have learned that this often happens because they have a need that's not being met.
What if I applied this idea to my "good girl" voice who had been very ornery as of late? What could it be that my "good girl" in my head needs but isn't getting?
Another thing I have seen some of my friends do around the New Year is go to vision board classes. They clip out pictures from magazines and arrange the ones that speak to them on a big board to reveal their longings and aspirations.
I have done these with friends but the exercise didn't mean a lot to me. Why? Well, I am not a visual thinker. Images don't do it for me in general. I am, however, a very auditory thinker. Applying the vision board concept to sound, I considered the "Year in Review" playlist on my music app.
Step 3: Nonjudgmentally Evaluate Your Clues
It included songs like "Float" by Janelle Monae, "Chvrch Girl" and "Cuff It" by Beyonce, "Bejeweled" by Taylor Swift, "Trustfall" by Pink, and all of the Barbie soundtrack. Does this sound like the playlist of a "good girl"? Or does it sound like the playlist of a girl who wants to have fun?
Bingo. And there we have it. The word of the year for 2024 is "fun." I don't need to get rid of the "good girl" at all. Instead, I need to let her have some fun.
Why did it take me so long to get there? It seems obvious in retrospect. Lawyers, including me, don't always trust fun. We trust hard work, clarity, and discipline a lot more. For this reason, proclaiming "fun" the word of the year is like announcing you are taking an indefinite vacation.
Keep Things in Perspective
But let's remember the context here. Picking a word of the year doesn't mean you'll only get the word you picked. Life is not that simple. Instead, I see it more as a guidepost. I know life will not only be fun in 2024. Even so, I can be on the lookout for life getting too tense and I can be creative about bringing in more fun.
In addition, recall that the thing that prompted me to think about this was the "good girl voice" who is so hardworking, highly motivated, and relentless that she drives me nuts. Given that she has taken up residence inside my brain, will a little bit of fun really cause me to shirk all effort and discipline?
Doubtful. What it might do, however, is help me remember the ways in which discipline, work, and pursuing goals can also be fun. It might also remind me how to look for fun even when things seem bleak and how to bring more fun into my community.
That's how I figured out my word of the year. First, I took stock of where I was. Then I looked for clues about what I needed, including from my community. Finally, I nonjudgmentally evaluated to identify the single word that could help me rebalance in the new year.
Do you pick a word of the year or do any other kind of new year's reflection? If you want to think about this more, check out the video from our past event "A Vision for the New Year and Guided Meditation". Whether you do or not, I hope that you have a "good" and "fun" year in 2024.
Want to learn more about mindfulness and compassion? Check out my new book, How to Be a Badass Lawyer, for a simple guide to creating a meditation practice of your own in 30 days. And to share mindfulness with your little one, check out my new children's book, Mommy Needs a Minute.
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