Let me tell you about the worst New Year’s resolution I ever made.
Three years ago, right after my startup crashed and burned, I decided I was going to “get my life together” through sheer force of will. I bought a fancy planner, downloaded seven different productivity apps, and told myself that this time would be different. I’d just power through with motivation and willpower.
By January 15th, I’d abandoned everything.
Sound familiar?
Here’s what nobody tells you about starting the year strong: the people who actually succeed aren’t relying on motivation or willpower at all. They’re playing an entirely different game.
After that spectacular failure (both the startup and the resolutions), I spent months studying what actually works. Not the Instagram-worthy morning routines or the “just believe in yourself” nonsense, but the weird, counterintuitive stuff that creates real change.
These seven approaches might sound strange at first, but they’re exactly what helped me rebuild after losing everything. And according to psychology, they work a hell of a lot better than trying to white-knuckle your way through January.
1. Design your environment to make decisions for you
When my startup was falling apart, I noticed something weird. The days I worked from my apartment, I’d end up on the couch watching Netflix by 2 PM. But when I worked from the coffee shop down the street, I’d be productive for hours.
The difference? Environment.
Research from behavioral scientists shows that we make about 35,000 decisions per day. Every single one depletes our mental energy. But here’s the hack: you can eliminate thousands of those decisions by letting your environment make them for you.
Want to eat healthier? Don’t keep junk food in the house. Period. Not hidden in a cabinet, not for “emergencies.” Just don’t buy it.
Want to read more? Delete social media apps from your phone and put a book where you usually scroll.
Want to exercise? Sleep in your workout clothes. I’m serious. It sounds ridiculous, but it works.
The goal isn’t to become a superhuman with infinite willpower. It’s to set up your world so the right choice is the easiest choice.
2. Start stupidly small (like embarrassingly small)
Remember when I mentioned those seven productivity apps I downloaded? Each one promised to revolutionize my life with comprehensive systems and elaborate workflows.
You know what actually worked? Writing one sentence per day.
That’s it. One sentence in a journal.
Stanford researcher BJ Fogg discovered that tiny habits work because they bypass our brain’s resistance mechanisms. When you commit to doing two pushups instead of a full workout, your brain doesn’t freak out and activate all its avoidance strategies.
Pick something so small it feels like cheating. Want to meditate? Start with three breaths. Want to write? One sentence. Want to network? Send one text.
The magic happens because once you start, you usually keep going. But even if you don’t, you’ve still won. You’re building the neural pathway that matters most: showing up.
3. Use temptation bundling to hack your rewards system
I’ve mentioned this before, but during my startup failure, I completely stopped taking care of myself. No exercise, terrible food, minimal sleep. The thought of going to the gym felt like torture.
Then I discovered temptation bundling, a concept from behavioral economist Katherine Milkman.
The idea is simple: pair something you need to do with something you want to do.
I started only allowing myself to listen to my favorite podcasts while walking. Only watching Netflix while on the treadmill. Only getting my favorite coffee after finishing my morning writing.
Your brain starts associating the thing you’re avoiding with the reward you crave. Suddenly, exercise isn’t punishment. It’s podcast time.
This works because you’re not fighting your brain’s reward system. You’re hijacking it.
4. Create artificial deadlines with real stakes
Here’s something nobody talks about: deadlines aren’t about time management. They’re about identity protection.
When you tell someone you’ll have something done by Friday, you’re not just managing time. You’re putting your reputation on the line. And humans will do almost anything to protect their reputation.
After my company failed, I struggled to write consistently. Then I started telling people I’d send them chapters by specific dates. Not “soon” or “when it’s ready.” Tuesday at 5 PM.
The fear of looking unreliable became stronger than the fear of creating imperfect work.
Find someone who will actually hold you accountable. Not your supportive friend who’ll understand if you flake. Someone whose opinion matters to you professionally.
5. Replace identity before changing behavior
Most people try to change their behavior first, hoping their identity will follow. “I’ll start running, then I’ll become a runner.”
Backwards.
Psychologist James Clear talks about identity-based habits. You become the person first, then the behavior follows naturally.
Instead of “I’m trying to write more,” say “I’m a writer.” Writers write. It’s what they do.
Instead of “I want to get in shape,” say “I’m someone who takes care of their body.”
This sounds like woo-woo self-help garbage, but there’s solid neuroscience behind it. When you identify as something, your brain actively looks for ways to confirm that identity. It’s called consistency bias, and it’s incredibly powerful.
6. Build systems for your worst days, not your best
Everyone can stick to their plan when they’re feeling motivated. The real test is what happens on the days when everything goes wrong.
During my lowest point, when the startup was clearly failing and investors were pulling out, I couldn’t maintain elaborate routines. But I could do three things: drink water, walk around the block, and write one page.
That became my “emergency protocol.” No matter how bad things got, I did those three things.
Design your systems for the version of you that’s exhausted, stressed, and overwhelmed. Because that person is going to show up more often than you think.
7. Focus on systems, not goals
Finally, here’s the most counterintuitive advice: stop setting goals.
Goals are about the future. Systems are about today.
“Lose 20 pounds” is a goal. “Pack gym clothes every night” is a system.
“Write a book” is a goal. “Write for 30 minutes each morning” is a system.
Goals create a constant state of failure (you haven’t achieved them yet) or temporary success (you achieved them, now what?). Systems create consistent progress.
When I was rebuilding after my startup failed, I didn’t set a goal to “get my life together.” I created systems: wake up at 5:30, write before checking email, walk after lunch, read before bed.
Small, repeatable actions that compound over time.
The bottom line
Starting the year strong has nothing to do with January 1st magic or sudden bursts of motivation. The calendar doesn’t care about your fresh start.
What actually works is understanding how your brain operates and working with it instead of against it. These seven strategies bypass the need for constant willpower by changing the game entirely.
Pick one. Just one. Make it so easy you can’t fail.
Because the truth about changing your life? It’s not about becoming a different person through sheer force of will. It’s about designing a life where the person you want to be would naturally thrive.
The best time to start isn’t January 1st. It’s today.









