Think about the beginnings in your life. The excitement in your family when you were born, the first moment you started school, your first love, your first trip out of town... These beginnings always have a special place in our hearts.
What about new things? Didn't we carefully put our new clothes next to our bed the night before the Eid, didn't we try to make fewer mistakes so that our scented eraser wouldn't run out quickly, didn't we say to our friends, "Wow, what did my mom/dad buy me?" and show our sneakers with the lights on? Greetings to the generation that takes a bath on Sundays and watches 'Great Sunday'.
We always make the most important decisions at such moments. We start diets on Mondays, blow out the candles wishing for the thing we want most on birthdays, and make new resolutions for the new year. We need a great reason to start, and this power to continue.
However, Robert Collier expresses success as the sum of small steps taken tirelessly every day on a certain subject. Big goals and big dreams can cause disappointment and make you feel constantly unsuccessful or inadequate.
'May the new year bring you health, happiness, peace, love...' New Year's Eve. We hear words like this a lot. This statement, which is actually said with good intentions, is similar to our mother beating the table by saying "poop is on the table" when we stubbed our foot on the table when we were little. There is nothing the table or time can do. It is your emotions, thoughts, and behaviors that will make the new year different from the previous one...
Passing on the past may cause you to make the same mistakes again. Put in your bag the lessons you learned from the events you experienced, your short and long term goals, the people who were good for you, the moments you do not want to forget, the activities you enjoy doing, your positive or not so positive emotions, your meaningful or meaningless thoughts, your purposeful or purposeless behaviors; Be yourself as your New Year's gift.
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