As a preamble, I heard of the "depth year" concept recently and found it a super valuable idea. I know some here are familiar with it. I'm starting mine now to run through 2021, with my monthly goals supporting my
reinvestment in the most meaningful processes, endeavors, people, and things that I've already chosen.
I'm open to new things and people just showing up in my life of course (and letting go of what no longer serves), but I'm making a point of curtailing the novelty-seeking startitis and "oo, shiny!" that leads to spending creep, time sinks and procrastination, and not actually accomplishing stuff.
@Raenia, I borrowed a little from you. :)
Goals:
1. Biz/Hustle -- at least 3 hours per weekday doing what my roadmap calls for at that time.
2. Weekending -- take weekends OFF from work! Listening to industry-related podcasts and books while I'm doing other stuff is OK.
3. Meditation -- 15 min per day (I use Insight Timer, free. None of the paid options).
4. Exercise -- walk or lift.
5. Skincare -- follow the schedule I already set up.
6. Show Up -- connect with people at least twice per week. Actually express gratitudes vs. just feeling them and saying nothing.
7. Financial Awareness -- track it all and don't get distracted again.
8. Tidy -- every day, set a timer for 20 minutes and put things away or clean something.
9. Dryish September -- just don't buy any wine, etc. It's OK to have a little at the rare, tiny socially distanced things with friends these days, but I seem to not be in the mood for booze overall right now. So let's just make it a thing.
10. Check in -- reread this post every day to keep myself pointed in the right direction, dammit.
Just mentioning, partly for the sake of allowing myself to be "known" (something I'm trying to be better at :P), that some good habit types are not listed here because I've already successfully put them in place. Like reading, for example: I far, far prefer nonfic and have been going through more than 100 books a year for the last few years (library audiobooks at 1.4x speed FTW!).
As a side note, I am very discriminating about the books I spend attention on, especially deeper into subject matter I'm growing more familiar with. If something proves to be a waste of my time at any point, I drop it and move on without guilt. It's not always the author's fault; it's sometimes because I'm already past the level they're teaching at. I do finish most books though, squeezing out as much learning from life as I can. <3
Thanks Raenia for starting these threads!