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Five Things We Learned About Living Fully and Mindfully in 2017

Five Things We Learned About Living Fully and Mindfully in 2017

Instead of our typical monthly learnings post, we decided to put our December theme into practice, and ✨ reflect ✨ on some of the most important lessons we took away from a full year of trying to live a little more fully and mindfully.

Inspired by our Guided Reflection Journal and all of our 2017 Membership Kits, we revisited some of our favorite themes of the year including Compassion, Resilience, Adventure, Creativity, and more. Here are just a few of the highlights:

1. Set an intention. Meet your goals.

We started out the year with Intention and thought about what we wanted most for the 12 months ahead of us. We thought about our goals — what we wanted to achieve — and set an intention — a deeper purpose that could guide our actions. We find that both goals and intentions are essential pieces of the puzzle when it comes to creating positive change in our lives. 

As we move towards the end of the year, we encourage you to look back on any goals and/or intentions you set for yourself.

  • Did you have a single word, phrase, or mantra you identified for the year?
  • How did you do with any goals you may have set?
  • How do you feel about them now?
  • What do you want to bring with you into the next year and what are you proud of yourself for checking off in this past one?

We take a detailed look back at the past year in our Guided Reflection Journal.

Not so much a paper-and-pencil kind of person? 🙅📝 We have a special digital-friendly version for all Holstee Members.


2. Making the most out of the worst.

When we asked members of our community to share one word describing 2017, a single answer (overwhelmingly) came up: challenging.

We’re right there with you. It has been an extraordinarily challenging year for so many of us, all over the world, for so many reasons. By the time we reached September, our month of Resilience, the theme felt more timely than ever.

One of the most important lessons from that theme is the power of resilience to transform how we relate to our most painful moments.

We read an incredible study by psychologists Richard Tedeschi and Lawrence Calhoun, who coined the term post-traumatic growth after interviewing people who suffered traumatic life events and finding that many of them experienced significant positive life changes after those events.

These people identified their trauma as a catalyst for personal growth. The lesson isn’t that we should walk in the direction of pain and trauma — but that if we do experience painful and traumatic moments, they can actually help us gain inner strength and a deeper appreciation of life.


We explore the power of Resilience in our September Resilience Kit (featuring one of our favorite prints of the year).


3. More with less.

In May's Simplicity Guide, we explored the Pareto Principle, which suggests that 20% of actions tend to yield 80% of the outcomes. Or, in other words, a small segment of things is usually responsible for most of the output. Some examples that may or may not resonate with you:

  • a small number of relationships produce most of our experiences of love and support
  • a small percentage of our clothes make up most of what we wear on a daily basis
  • a small number of items in our home make us feel happier or more content on a daily basis

The numbers aren’t hard facts, but this 80/20 rule, when put into practice, can help us zero in on the activities, people, and material objects that are most meaningful to us.

In our Guided Reflection Journal, we use the Pareto Principle to reflect on what brought us the most joy (and what we could have done without) in the past year.

4. Change your mindset, change your life.

In our Creativity Guide from July, we explore the idea of mindsets as articulated by the Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck. Dweck distinguishes between two common mindsets most people adopt throughout their lives.

A Fixed Mindset is one in which we believe our abilities are set in stone or predetermined. Every challenge is merely a chance to prove mastery, and every failure is an indication of deficiency, weakness, or lack of skill.

A Growth Mindset, on the other hand, is one in which we believe our abilities are malleable: what we do today will help us improve. Failures and mistakes aren’t a megaphone shouting out our weaknesses to the world; they’re pointing us in the direction of what we need to work on and where we can focus our energy.

Dweck’s research focuses a lot on the effects of these two mindsets specifically on children, considering the ways traditional assessment and performance measurement favor natural ability and emphasize mastery rather than improvement over time. But as adults, the distinction between the two can be a helpful way for us to relate to the work we do, the things we make, and the challenges we take on.

Dweck even writes that people who embody these two mindsets actually see themselves differently in times of failure: those with a Fixed Mindset feel shame and quickly try to hide their deficiencies, while those with a Growth Mindset are able to bounce back more quickly and see failure as an opportunity to learn.


We consider the power of shifting mindsets in our Creativity Kit.


5. Look back in order to move forward.

Taking time to reflect at the end of the year is a helpful step no matter what our plans look like for January 1st. So now we ask you:

  • What were your most memorable adventures from 2017?
  • What obstacles did you face and how did you react to them?
  • What brought you the most joy and who did you most enjoy spending your time with?

These questions get us a little closer to answering one important question:

What did this year teach you?

What did you learn about yourself, about the world around you, about your relationships and habits and struggles and feelings?

Answering these questions helps us know ourselves better.

They help us avoid making the same mistakes and repeating the same bad patterns.

And they help us start again on the right foot. 👌 


Consider all of these great questions and (so many!) more in our Guided Reflection Journal.


Thanks for joining us on this wild ride of a year (truly an understatement). We’re grateful to have you here, and we’re thrilled to continue exploring all of the great stuff of life together in 2018. Cheers! 


P.S. Holstee Members 👋: Don’t forget to check out this month’s theme page to access the Guided Reflection Journal, Curated Resources, and the Reflection Art desktop and mobile downloads to keep the theme at the front of your mind this month!  

 

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Jennifer Lioy is a writer, designer, illustrator, feelings-haver, and all-things-doer at Holstee (technically, the Creative and Communications Lead if anyone's asking). She lives in Austin, TX and wishes she could eat breakfast tacos every day. If given the chance, she will corner you in a bar to ask you what you’re afraid of.

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