Happy Same Year!

January 1st. The annual delusion festival begins. 

"This year will be different!" "New year, new strategy!" "2026 is our year!" 

Narrator: It won't be, it isn't, and it's not. 

The Pattern You Can't See 

After 18 years of watching businesses "start fresh" every January, here's what actually happens: 

You're not making new resolutions. You're recycling last year's failures with fresh enthusiasm. 

That hiring problem you're going to "fix" this year? It's the same one from 2025, 2024, and 2023. You just added "better" in front of it. "Better hiring process!" Instead of asking why your hiring process keeps failing. 

That culture initiative? It's last year's initiative with a new name. Because naming things differently is easier than doing things differently. 

The January Amnesia Epidemic 

Something magical happens every December 31st. We forget. 

We forget that we said the exact same things last January. We forget why last year's plans failed. We forget that energy without strategy is just expensive movement. 

So we make the same resolutions with the same flaws and expect different results. 

That's not optimism. That's amnesia. 

What Actually Changes Things 

Want to know what would actually make 2026 different? 

Stop making resolutions. Start asking why last year's didn't work. 

Not "what" are we going to do differently. But "why" didn't it work last time? 

  • Why did that culture initiative die in Q2? 

  • Why did those quarterly reviews never happen? 

  • Why did that hiring process never get fixed? 

The answer is never "we didn't try hard enough." The answer is always "we didn't address the real problem." 

The Real Problem 

Your resolutions fail because you're solving symptoms, not systems. 

"Better communication" isn't a resolution. It's a symptom of unclear structure. "Improved culture" isn't a goal. It's a symptom of poor leadership systems. "Better hiring" isn't a fix. It's a symptom of not knowing what you actually need. 

Until you fix the system, you'll keep making the same resolution every year with slightly different words. 

Your Anti-Resolution Resolution 

This January 1st, try something revolutionary: 

Don't add anything new. 

Instead, pick one thing that failed last year and ask: 

  • What system allowed this to fail? 

  • What structure needs to change? 

  • What am I avoiding by calling this a "goal" instead of fixing the root cause? 

Fix one system. Just one. 

That's worth more than fifty resolutions. 

The Truth About 2026 

Your success this year won't come from what you add. It'll come from what you finally stop repeating. 

Stop resolving to do better. Start understanding why you didn't. 

Because the definition of insanity isn't doing the same thing expecting different results. 

It's making the same resolution expecting different results. 

Happy Same Year, everyone. 

 

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The One Thing That Should Never Leave Your To-Do List