It's interesting how the New Year is the time to reinvent ourselves.
This year I'll be the person I've always wanted to become. This year I'll work out more. This year I'll eat well. This year I'll start journaling. This year. This week. This Monday. Tomorrow. In an hour.
Why is it always the New Year?
New Year, New me. We know the saying.
But think about it, really. What changed between the person you were at 11:59 on December 31st and the person you are at 12:01 January 1st? Are you suddenly more capable of making those changes than you were two minutes ago? In what way is this different from how you changed from, say, 11:59 on April 15th to 12:01 on April 16th?
Why does the new you have to come in the new year?
I understand certain time-bound reinventions.
This semester I'll be a better student (I can't change how I study with nothing to study.) This week I'll organize my time better (assuming the previous week has just ended, this week is all you've got.)
But why next year? I understand if suddenly the evening of December 31st you are suddenly struck by the realization of change being required. But people make their resolution lists days, if not weeks in advance! What is stopping them from implementing those changes before the clock strikes midnight and one of the numbers on the calendar is changed for the next 365 days?
That is not to say I am not the kind of person to think the same way. A new calendar year feels like a fresh start, something that will wipe away the failures and shortcomings of the year before.
But really, what has changed? What in us has changed?
So maybe even if it's April 15th, not a particularly special day that I'm aware of (unless, of course, it's someone's birthday), and you think of a life change you'd want to implement, do it. No need to wait for a new day, or week, or month, or even year.
The calendar isn't what changes you.
You are what changes you.