There is often pressure on New Year’s Eve.
Pressure to make plans.
Pressure to start over.
There is pressure to make audacious statements about our aspirations, objectives, and resolutions for a better version of ourselves than we are now.
However, there is a more subdued, in-depth task that deserves our attention before we hurry forward, before we make lists, download planners, or declare who we intend to become.
Celebrating the year that moulded us!!!
This year wasn’t just a passing year.
We were shaped by it.
It posed unexpected questions.
We were stretched in unexpected ways.
It exposed limitations we had to recognise as well as strengths we were unaware we possessed.
And today, on the brink of what was and what will be, we take a moment to recognise the year rather than pass judgment on it.
The Year as a Teacher, Not a Scorecard
We often use report cards to assess our years:
- What did I accomplish?
- What was ineffective?
- Where did I fall short?
- What do I do next
But life does not teach in straight lines.
Some of the most formative seasons don’t have visible victories. They come with:
- Endurance
- Calm obedience
- Resilience under duress
- Refusing to give up when it seemed rational to do so
Even if you didn’t get all you wanted this year, you did get something you needed.
Knowledge.
Boundaries and discernment.
Clarity and humility.
Even if they don’t neatly fit into a goal tracker, those still matter.
Honouring the Silent Victories
Some successes go unnoticed. There are victories no one applauds:
- The days you showed up exhausted but dedicated
- The conversations you handled with grace rather than ego
- The healing you chose above proving a point
- The self-control to pause when everything inside of you wanted to rush
These moments don’t trend.
They don’t go viral.
They are not accompanied by certifications.
However, they mould character. And, character sustains development.
Ask yourself, “What did I survive this year?” before establishing new goals.
What have I outgrown?
What did I stop pushing at last?
That introspection is a sign of growth, not weakness.
Giving Up the Story of “I Didn’t Do Enough”
The idea that “I somehow wasted the year if I didn’t achieve more” is one of the most harmful falsehoods we carry into the new year.
Growth isn’t always apparent.
Progress is not always loud.
The fact that you are still standing and upholding your moral principles can sometimes be your greatest accomplishment of the year.
You don’t have to punish yourself to improve.
Shame is not a necessary source of drive.
To support the following year, you don’t have to erase the previous one.
You can respect it while still wanting more.
Both are able to cohabit.
Thankfulness Without Denial
It is not necessary to romanticise suffering in order to honour the year.
It entails accepting reality with compassion and honesty:
Yes, it was difficult.
Yes, it stretched me.
Certainly, I wouldn’t pick some of it again.
Nevertheless:
I gained knowledge.
I matured.
Became more deliberate.
Have new perspectives.
Being grateful does not equate to denial.
It’s acknowledgment.
Acknowledgment that we can get better through challenging times.
How to Start the New Year in a Healthier Way
Try this instead of setting goals:
- List three lessons you learned this year.
- Mention and acknowledge one way you showed resilience.
- Let go of one unrealistic expectation.
- Hold onto one value that you don’t want to lose.
Then, and only then, start to imagine what comes next.
Not under duress.
Not from comparison.
But from clarity.
May we resist the temptation to hurry through this year as it draws to an end.
May we pay tribute to the human version of ourselves that made it through, sometimes with grace and sometimes with flaws.
Forgetting is not the beginning of the future.
Understanding is the first step.
And when we commemorate the year that moulded us, we enter the new one with greater awareness, alignment, and roundedness.
What lessons did you learn this year, and what are you deciding to apply going forward?
Please drop your thoughts or feedback in the comments section below.

The year wasn’t easy, but it was meaningful.
A collective reflection we all need👌👌
A meaningful pause. Happy New year in advance
What a beautiful reminder
Every part mattered
Happy New year my able mentor