Look, I’ll be straight with you. Three years ago, I was sitting in my apartment in Saigon, surrounded by half-empty coffee cups and endless to-do lists, wondering why I still felt stuck despite all my “progress.”
I’d built a successful business, traveled the world, and checked off most of my goals. But something was off. I was dragging around invisible weights that made every step forward feel like pushing through mud.
It wasn’t until I started ruthlessly cutting things from my life that everything changed. Not adding more routines, not downloading another productivity app, but actually letting go of the dead weight I’d been carrying for years.
Now that we’re a few days into the new year, maybe you’re feeling that same restlessness. That nagging sense that you need a real fresh start, not just another resolution you’ll abandon by February.
Here’s the thing: before you can build something new, you need to clear the ground. And that means getting rid of these eight things that are quietly sabotaging your growth.
1. The fantasy version of yourself
You know the one I’m talking about. The version of you that wakes up at 5 AM, meditates for an hour, runs 10 miles, and still has time to journal before crushing it at work.
I spent years trying to become this idealized version of myself. Reading every productivity book, following every guru’s morning routine, constantly feeling like a failure when I hit snooze for the third time.
But here’s what I learned: that fantasy version isn’t motivating you. It’s paralyzing you.
Every time you compare your actual self to this impossible standard, you’re reinforcing the belief that you’re not good enough. You’re setting yourself up for disappointment before you even start.
The real breakthrough happens when you accept who you are right now and work from there. Not the person you think you should be, but the actual human being reading this article.
Start where you are. Use what you have. Do what you can. That’s how real change happens.
2. Your addiction to being busy
“How are you?”“Busy!”
Sound familiar? We wear busyness like a badge of honor, as if constantly rushing from one thing to the next proves our worth.
In my book “Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego”, I explore how Buddhist philosophy teaches us that constant motion isn’t progress. Sometimes it’s just noise.
I used to fill every moment with something. Podcasts during walks, audiobooks during workouts, work calls during lunch. The thought of empty space in my calendar actually made me anxious.
But busyness is often just sophisticated procrastination. It’s easier to stay busy with small tasks than to face the big, scary changes we know we need to make.
What would happen if you actually allowed yourself to be still? To have gaps in your schedule? To say “I’m doing well” instead of “I’m busy” when someone asks how you are?
The world won’t end. But your addiction to constant motion might, and that’s exactly what needs to happen.
3. Relationships that drain your energy
We need to talk about those people in your life who leave you feeling exhausted every time you interact with them.
You know exactly who I mean. The friend who only calls when they need something. The family member who criticizes every decision you make. The colleague who dumps their negativity on you daily.
I get it. Cutting people out feels harsh, especially when there’s history involved. But maintaining relationships out of obligation or guilt is like carrying around a backpack full of rocks. Eventually, you’ll collapse under the weight.
This doesn’t mean you need to burn bridges or create drama. Sometimes it’s as simple as not initiating contact, setting boundaries, or limiting your exposure to certain people.
Your energy is finite. Every minute you spend with someone who drains you is a minute you can’t spend with someone who energizes you. Choose wisely.
4. The need to have all the answers
When I became a father recently, it hit me like a freight train: I have absolutely no idea what I’m doing. And for someone who built a career around giving advice, that was terrifying.
But it was also liberating.
We live in a world that rewards certainty and confidence, even when it’s completely unfounded. We’re expected to have five-year plans, clear opinions on everything, and unwavering direction.
But needing to have all the answers keeps you stuck. It prevents you from trying new things, asking for help, or admitting when you’re wrong. It turns life into a performance instead of an experience.
What if you entered 2026 with the radical acceptance that you don’t know what you don’t know? What if “I’m not sure” became a perfectly acceptable answer?
5. Your comfort zone disguised as self-care
Self-care has become the ultimate excuse for avoiding discomfort. Can’t face that difficult conversation? Self-care. Don’t want to push yourself at the gym? Self-care. Avoiding that challenging project? You guessed it, self-care.
Don’t get me wrong. Real self-care is essential. But somewhere along the way, we’ve confused self-care with self-indulgence.
True self-care sometimes means doing the hard things. Having the uncomfortable conversation. Pushing through resistance. Facing the fears you’ve been avoiding.
Your comfort zone isn’t protecting you. It’s shrinking your world, one “safe” choice at a time.
6. The stories you tell yourself about your past
We all have a narrative about who we are based on what’s happened to us. Maybe you’re “the one who always gets overlooked” or “the person who’s bad with money” or “someone who can’t maintain relationships.”
I spent most of my twenties telling myself I was an anxious person. It became my identity. Every decision, every interaction was filtered through this story.
But as I write about in “Hidden Secrets of Buddhism”, Buddhist philosophy teaches us that we are not our thoughts or our past experiences. We’re the awareness observing them.
Your past happened, yes. But the story you tell yourself about it? That’s optional. And if that story isn’t serving you, it’s time to write a new one.
7. The belief that you need permission
Waiting for the right moment. Waiting for approval. Waiting for someone to tell you it’s okay to pursue what you want.
How much of your life have you spent waiting for permission that’s never going to come?
Nobody is going to tap you on the shoulder and say, “Now’s your time.” Nobody is going to give you a permission slip to change careers, end a relationship, or pursue your dreams.
The harsh truth is that most people are too busy worrying about their own lives to care about yours. That criticism you’re afraid of and that judgment you’re avoiding…it’s mostly in your head.
Stop waiting for external validation. The only permission you need is your own.
8. Your obsession with potential
“You have so much potential.”
For years, I lived on this compliment. It felt good to be seen as someone with possibilities, someone who could do great things… someday.
But potential is a trap. It’s a comfortable place to hide because as long as you’re not trying, you can’t fail. As long as you don’t commit, you can keep all your options open.
Living in potential means never having to face the messy reality of actual achievement. It means staying safely in the realm of “could be” instead of dealing with “what is.”
At some point, you have to cash in that potential for something real. Even if it’s imperfect. Even if it’s not what you imagined. Because unused potential isn’t actually worth anything.
Final words
Here’s what nobody tells you about fresh starts: they’re not about adding new things to your life. They’re about creating space by removing what doesn’t belong.
These eight things might feel safe and comfortable, but they’re actually comfort blankets that have become straightjackets. They’re the invisible chains keeping you exactly where you are.
This year, you have a choice. You can drag all this baggage with you into another year, or you can start cutting the dead weight now.
It won’t be comfortable. Letting go never is. But on the other side of that discomfort is the freedom you’ve been looking for.
The question is: are you ready to let go?












