Resolutions Revisited: 2020

Time to dust off this long-dormant page to continue my annual tradition of public self-evaluation, and to revisit the goals I set at the beginning of this year. Of course, these goals were written 2 months before the world changed irrevocably in a million different ways – but a post where I just write “HA!” after each aspiration that failed to anticipate a global pandemic seems cruel to my past self, and the things we all did to survive this year. So I will do my best to be kind and generous to my selves, past and present. This year, at least, we deserve it.

Looking Back

Hindsight truly being 20/20 (sorry), here is how I did this year:

10. Delete Facebook.

I did this! For the first 6 months of the year, I removed myself from Facebook and deleted the app from my phone. It had become unconscionable to continue to support the ad revenue of a company that, from where I am standing, poses one of the greatest threats to democracy (and society writ large) in the 21st century. Facebook has absolutely done more ill than good to global institutions, mental health, and data sovereignty, and it was a joy to leave it. No, I didn’t leave Instagram as well. Yes, I know that Facebook owns Instagram, and that if I truly wanted these lofty words to matter I would have had the gumption to do both. But addiction is hard, and withdrawal is real.

Of course, I also said that I left Facebook for the first 6 months of the year. Eventually, and begrudgingly, I had to rejoin in order to take on some social media responsibilities at work – but I am happy to report that I have since passed those on to others, and am once again off the blighted platform.

9. Eat less meat.

I won’t lie, I completely forgot that I had set this goal. That is to say nothing of its worthiness – I still feel strongly that I need to reduce my meat consumption for environmental reasons. But when the world turned upside down, and food scarcity and financial stability were suddenly on my radar in ways they had never been before, dietary goals simply became secondary. So I didn’t keep track. Colloquially, I think I likely did eat less meat this year than others. We had my vegetarian mother-in-law staying with us for the first months of the pandemic, so we ate meat-free meals a lot. But I cannot truthfully claim that I did it with this goal in mind.

8. Reduce phone screen time from 10% to less than 5%.

In retrospect, this seems laughably naïve. But again, we had no idea what was coming. But no, this did not happen. Suddenly, our phones and computers went from being screens we hid behind to avoid social interaction to being our only portal to social interaction. Who knows what the long-term effects of this year’s reliance on technology will be for mental and emotional well-being. But as I said, we did what we had to in order to survive.

7. Spend no money on books – read what I already own, or use the library.

I did this! This may be the one goal which I unequivocally and intentionally stuck to, all 12 months of this year. The only new books which entered my collection were gifts from other people. I read books from my own shelves that I have been meaning to get to for years. I renewed my library card, and used it often. True, I have not read as much this year as in years past. While I had an unexpected wealth of time, I also had a growing toddler who is far more interesting than anything I have ever read. And there are some books which it will be hard to continue not to buy – works by favourite authors, conclusions to series I own the rest of, that sort of thing – but I am certainly going to try to continue being more selective about buying books versus supporting one of the true miracles of organized society: the free public library.

6. No sugary drinks.

Yeah, I didn’t do this. I do try to order sugar-free soft drinks when I am getting takeout (boy, has this been the year for takeout); but I still put sugar in my coffee, I still order from Starbucks, I still drink cans of pop by the case. I shouldn’t, but I do. Maybe next year.

But probably not.

5. No video games Monday-Thursday.

This one is truly laughable. Video games played a huge role in keeping me sane this year, and I don’t apologize for it. In fact, video games have factored into many of the brightest memories I have of this blighted year. Early on in the pandemic, our family did what everyone was doing – connecting with people we could no longer see in person by playing Jackbox and House Party games virtually. In those first few months, Angela and I rediscovered the joy of playing couch co-op games, something we had not done in ages. While Ophelia napped, we chopped and served our way through Overcooked 1 and 2, whisper-yelling at each other so as not to wake the baby. Then, for Father’s Day, Angela surprised me with a Nintendo Switch (the generosity and awesomeness of which still astounds me), and every day since we have enjoyed the sweet escapism of Animal Crossing. Video games really and truly got us through this year. No regrets.

4. Go to the doctor.

I didn’t do this. Not because I didn’t want to – when the year began, I had absolutely every intention of following through on this one. But then it became inadvisable and a waste of resources for healthy people to visit the doctor, and so I put it on hold. Next October I turn 30. Hopefully by then the world will be sane enough that I can make good on this one. Who knows, maybe pigs will fly and I will go to the dentist too.

3. Finish a major writing project.

This one hurts a little bit. I don’t regret how I spent this year, as we shall see when we get to the bottom of this list. But I cannot help feeling, as I look back at the unexpected gift of time that I was given this year, that I must have done something wrong. Year after year, I add to the pile of writing projects I have begun but not finished. Novels, poetry chapbooks, short stories, blog posts. All sit in digital purgatory, waiting to be resumed. And I cannot imagine another year where I will have more time that I could, with self-discipline and determination, have spent writing.

In my head and in my heart, I am a writer. It is what I tell myself I would do if money was immaterial, if I didn’t have to keep a job to house and feed my family, if, if, if. But a writer writes. I, as evidenced by this blog alone, do not. Perhaps it is as simple as that.

2. Rid myself of gamification.

Hey, 2 out of 9 ain’t bad. Looking back at my post from last year on the many gamified apps and experiences I was plugged into, I have now excised all of them! I really feel that I have made progress shifting my brain from objective-based reward seeking to process-based enjoyment. It is an ongoing battle, but I do make a conscious effort to interrogate my motivations in reading a thing or buying a thing or doing a thing. Am I reading/buying/doing in order to score a dopemine dump from some ultimately meaningless system of badges and achievements and rewards? Or am I doing/buying/reading because I enjoy it? Will it fulfill me in some deeper way? Will it make me or my family happier? Ultimately, am I in control?

Of course, this blog may be the last remaining exception. I think I write it for me, but I will still check back 100 times in the next few days to see how many people have read it.

1. Prioritize family time.

This was going to be my hardest goal to accomplish, and yet it became the easiest. Nothing has been good about this year. Hundreds of thousands of people have died in a global pandemic, nationalism and racial violence have continue to become more mainstream, wealth disparity has grown wider, and RBG died. But in the midst of all that suffering, I received an incredible blessing. I got laid off. From April to June, I was off work – and because I live in Canada, my government made sure I received a benefit sufficient to cover my family’s needs. As a result, I got to be home every single day while my daughter grew from 8 to 10 months old. I got to see her learn to take steps, to babble and speak, to explore the world around her. I got time with my wife in as beautiful a spring as I can remember. I got to slow down for a while, to be present for moments I would otherwise have missed. So I didn’t write a book. I didn’t change the world. I didn’t do much of anything at all. I was exactly where I needed to be.

Looking Ahead

Having looked back, it is time to (foolishly, probably) set some goals for 2021. How does one set goals in a year like this, when the worst may yet be ahead? Just call me Don Quixote.

10. Get vaccinated.

9. Reply more promptly.

8. Walk every day.

7. Write another crossword.

6. Catch up on some zeitgeisty media.

5. Reduce the number of apps on my phone.

4. Create more.

3. Cook more.

2. For real this time, finish a major writing project.

1. Focus on mental health.

Resolutions Revisited: 2019

Last year around this time, I began a now-annual tradition of examining my progress against a list of goals for the year, and setting new ones. Call them resolutions, or lifestyle changes, or self-examination; whatever they are, they have proven hugely helpful to me as I navigate big changes in my life these last few years. So here are my reflections on how I stacked up to my goals for 2019, and the things I hope to change for the better in 2020.

Looking Back

Here is how I did in 2019:

10. Recommit to reading.

Off to a good start, because I definitely did this! I may not have finished with an impressive number of books read by the end of the year, but that can mostly be attributed to having had a child in August that slowed down my pace considerably. I did, however, renew my library card after many years of inactivity – and I even used it! I also finally dipped my toe into audiobooks, having listened exclusively to podcasts for many years. This helped me to make more productive use of driving and other menial time, and I discovered some excellent books through the medium! I really tried to focus on making diverse, healthy reading choices throughout this year, which I have documented through a series of posts here. In all, I am thrilled with my year of reading in 2019, and aim to build on those successes in 2020.

9. Write something every day.

I didn’t keep a checklist or a calendar, and I know for certain that there  were many days that I didn’t write much beyond a text or an email, but I did do a lot more writing this year than last. I wrote a massive new program at work, wrote more poetry, made some progress on my Great Unfinished Novel, and began work on a number of stories and projects which I am excited to keep exploring. I began writing a great many things this year but finished very few – something to grow on perhaps.

8. Get up early.

A byproduct of having had a child is that, beginning in August when she was born, getting up early has not been optional. But even prior to that, I made a genuine effort to avoid sleeping in. The next step, and one I want to carry forward, is to learn to make productive use of those first hours of the day. I am not angling to be a high-performance CEO, who has read an entire book and gone to the gym by 4 a.m., but I do want to be more adept at getting “up and at ‘em”

7. Create for myself, not a market.

Honestly, I don’t know how well I did here. I find it very difficult to write purely for the joy of the exercise, without any thought of whether someone may enjoy reading what I have written or who that audience might be. I have set aside ideas which I think are interesting, simply because it seems a waste of time to write something which no one would be interested in publishing. Then, of course, I feel guilty for wanting more than to create simply for the joy of creating, and the cycle continues. I am working on it, but I am not there yet.

6. Do fewer things with more care.

I don’t know whether I have actually managed to reduce the number of things demanding my attention this year over years past, but I know that I made a conscious effort to say “no” to commitments to which I knew I could not give the complete attention they would need. 

5. Check in.

This is one goal that I fell far short of this year. I had hoped to develop the habit of checking in with friends and family unprompted, to offer a listening ear to those in need and demonstrate the importance of those relationships through the simple act of keeping in touch. Looking back, I can’t think of more than a handful of times I did that all year, which is disappointing.

4. Invest as much time into Canadian issues as I do American politics.

There was never going to be a better opportunity to achieve this goal than in a year full of political scandal and a fiery general election, and yet I still fell far short once again. Part of the reason for this is that I am intensely dialed into US politics, listening to daily podcasts and following along actively throughout most days; but part is also that I am not nearly an active enough participant in my own country’s issues and affairs. I will continue to try to strike a better balance.

3. Celebrate the successes of others.

I am only reminded that this was a stated goal for this year as I reread it now – I must admit that I had completely forgotten it. Nevertheless, I hope that those with whom I work and spend my days feel that I shared in the joys of their accomplishments this year. I can’t think of a time when I resented someone for an achievement, so I suppose that counts?

2. Be present.

I have definitely made progress in this direction, and in my goals for the coming year (listed below) I am setting out some strong and measurable parameters to continue to cut away distractions. This will always be a work-in-progress in today’s oversaturated media environment, but the first step is to be conscious of the things that pull my focus away from what is important.

1. Figure out fatherhood.

Every day with my child is a new adventure, and I will never be perfect – but each day I set out with the goal of being the best father I can be. I can do no more and no less.


Looking Ahead

Having looked back, it is time to take what I have learned and look ahead. Here are the things I hope to accomplish, and the objectives to which I hope to hold myself, in 2020:

10. Delete Facebook.

9. Eat less meat.

8. Reduce phone screen time from 10% to less than 5%.

7. Spend no money on books – read what I already own, or use the library.

6. No sugary drinks.

5. No video games Monday-Thursday.

4. Go to the doctor.

3. Finish a major writing project.

2. Rid myself of gamification.

1. Prioritize family time.

Resolutions Revisited

Last year around this time, I made honest “new year’s resolutions” for the first time in my adult life. I tried to follow the advice of goal setting gurus: making them reasonable and achievable; blending short- and long-term timelines; balancing aspiration and realism. I put real care and consideration into a list of 10 items, and treated them as commitments to myself. Despite taking the enterprise seriously, I was still surprised at how helpful I actually found the exercise to be. I have never been a goal setter. This was unexplored territory to me. But checking in regularly with myself throughout the year (a year in which I faced more “big picture” life moments than perhaps any year previous) and weighing decisions against my resolutions actually helped me a great deal. As a new year rolls over once again, I want to revisit those goals – Socrates and the unexamined life and all that. I want to assess my success (or lack thereof), revise and recommit.


Looking Back

Here is how I did in 2018:

10. Go outside.

I began the year working in the sales job I had been in for a while, and I could feel the sedentary nature of office life slowly crushing me. There were days where it felt like I was drowning, where the lack of fresh air, creativity, and reprieve from stress would push me to crushing depths. Then, against all expectation, a dream opportunity presented itself. Just as I was reaching the inevitable impasse where I needed to leave my corporate job or risk real damage to my mental health, I was given the opportunity to go outside. I took a job coordinating the Outdoor Education program at the camp I had worked at growing up. Angela and I (in a moment of incredible support from my amazing wife) uprooted ourselves and moved with our dog to a children’s camp so that I could follow a lifelong dream. Immediately, so much felt better. I lost weight, I felt healthy, I breathed fresh air. I went outside.

9. Read more poetry.

I tried. I really did. I didn’t do well reading poetry anthologies or books (or books in general, really – of the measly 23 books I read in 2018, only 2 were books of poetry), but I tried to fill my “spaces” with more poetry. I followed a number of poetry accounts on Instagram and Twitter, so that as I indulged my media addiction and trudged through the cesspools of the social internet, I could at least count on the terrible news being broken up periodically with beauty. It has been a small measure, but it has helped.

8. Write more poetry.

This I did unequivocally. Admittedly, I am very much a novice poet. I wrote a few years ago about coming back to poetry after being turned off of it by the way it is taught in the Canadian school system. The delight that rediscovering poetry has brought me cannot be overstated. It is like candy for my soul. I am unfailingly poor at evaluating my own work, but I strongly suspect that most poetry I write is awful. I am never sure what to do with it – do I post it here? Do I continue to collect it and edit it in hopes that someday someone else might publish it? Do I just write for myself and let it live in Moleskine notebooks? I do not know. What I do know is that I wrote a fair bit this past year, and that I don’t want to stop.

7. Blog. Weekly.

As pleased I am with my success in my last goal, I am equally disappointed in my lack here. Granted, I could not see at the outset of last year the adventures that would be in store – the ways in which real life would simply take priority. I neglected blogging for many reasons. I was busy, I wrote other things, I felt I had nothing worthwhile to say. In the end, I don’t think having a regular posting schedule is particularly helpful for me. It works for some, no doubt. My lack of a cohesive theme or regular “series” of posts doesn’t play easily into posting with such regimented regularity. Certainly having more discipline around writing is something I need to work on if I ever want a real shot at writing professionally, but for now I think I am okay with posting in this space when I have something to say. That being said, I have a couple of projects in mind which I think this may in fact be the right space for, so I hope to have more content up in the coming months.

6. Recharge.

As I said above, I have seldom felt better. There are still days where I feel worn down by it all, and many days I am exhausted beyond belief – but in general, it is the exhaustion of having given myself to something I care deeply about. I had forgotten how good that can feel.

5. Be careful.

It is hard to measure the amount of care I have brought to relationships, decisions, and myself over the past year, but I am conscious of having tried. I have endeavoured to be literally “full of care” this year, and I hope I have succeeded.

4. Get something published.

As with writing, I feel that this particular goal fell victim to a lack of focus. I had every intention of resuming the practice of submitting things I have written to accepting publications, but I simply didn’t do it. Nobody can publish your writing if they don’t see it. If memory serves, I only tried to shop around a single piece this year (the Universal Language of Hide and Seek, which I ended up publishing here) and quickly became discouraged by its lack of an audience. As will become clear in my 2019 goals, I think that my best writing ultimately comes when I stop writing for an audience and simply write what I want to read. But I also need to do the work.

3. Listen to more diverse voices.

This is perhaps the goal which was most omnipresent in my mind throughout 2018. I wrote a series of posts early in the year examining the composition of “Top 100” book lists from major media organizations, and it was impossible to ignore the lack of diversity in what we typically associate with “greatness”. I have tried all year to seek out new and underrepresented voices to broaden my context and understanding, whether in media or literature or music and beyond. This is something I am committed to doing well beyond this year, as I can feel the marked difference it has made in my outlook. 

2. Be content.

Contentment is the pervasive thread throughout any of the success I have found over the past year. Choosing happiness over status or wealth or complacency has sparked every positive change I have made these past months. Being content has enabled me to be other things as well – productive, present, and grateful.

1. Learn to say the sentence, “I don’t know enough about that to have formed an opinion.”

This is something I will continue to work on my whole life, and probably still never be as good at it as I should. In a world where anyone can find an audience online and shout their feelings into the void, it is extraordinarily difficult to show restraint. It is hard to take time to read the article instead of the headline, to find the middle path instead of choosing a side, to wait for enough data to make an informed decision. I will keep trying to find the humility and diplomacy to admit when I don’t have a strong enough opinion to defend, and to seek deeper arguments.


Looking Ahead

Having looked back, it is time to take what I have learned and look ahead. Here are the things I hope to accomplish, and the objectives to which I hope to hold myself, in 2019:

 

10. Recommit to reading.

9. Write something every day.

8. Get up early.

7. Create for myself, not a market.

6. Do fewer things with more care.

5. Check in.

4. Invest as much time into Canadian issues as I do American politics.

3. Celebrate the successes of others.

2. Be present.

1. Figure out fatherhood.