Goals aren’t for everyone. Goals in January? Even less so. For some of us, setting goals is just setting ourselves up for failure. You need to take a good hard look at where you are, where you want to go, and what stands in your way. 1. Current Obligations If you are already over-committed, you might want to re-examine your priorities and see if you actually have the bandwidth to take on new tasks. If not? This probably isn’t the right time for you to set new goals. Instead, you might want to look into what steps you could take to free up your bandwidth — to either get a better handle on everything you’re currently trying to do, or make space for new goals in the future. 2. Emotional State Check in with yourself, first. If you’re not in the right space, emotionally, setting goals can end up hurting you. Some people are naturally contrary, and when faced with a goal, find ourselves doing anything else. Others? We have trouble dealing with the setbacks and failures that are intrinsically a part of striving for something that’s not in our reach, yet. If you know that you won’t be able to roll with the setbacks and keep at it? Your priority should be working on getting yourself back on more stable ground, emotionally. And making sure that you have a firm support network that will be able to help you through any setbacks and push you toward your better self. Instead of setting goals, just work on whatever project seems to be flowing better and concentrate on making progress. Let your creative side out, without burdening it with expectations. Of course, if you find setting and meeting goals intrinsically encouraging and reinforcing, then do so. Just make sure they’re achievable and things you actually have control over. For writers? Setting word count or page-edit goals are something you can control. Self-publishing or querying 50 agents is something you can control. Getting an agent or traditionally published? Not so much. 3. Timing Basically, whether it’s the right time for you to set goals, or not, just boils down to timing. Timing of obligations. Timing of dealing with everything life throws at you. For me? New Years Resolutions are a GREAT time to set goals and plan out how I’m going to approach them. Why? Because October is busy and has #OctPoWriMo, November is PACKED and has #NaNoWriMo, and before I can catch my breath? December is there with all the holiday cards and decorations and baking and gatherings. January? Is my first chance to breath since the start of fall. It’s my first chance to take a step back, see where I am, and decide the best way to get from here to where I want to go. But, your annual cycle doesn’t necessarily look like mine. For professors or teachers, summer might be your time. For tax accountants? May. For parents? September (or October, after all those open houses and back-to-school activities and the first wave of brought-home-germs). Don’t feel like you’re doing things wrong if your schedule doesn’t match up with the calendar, or what everyone else is doing. As I’m fond of saying at my dayjob, processes exist to help you accomplish stuff. If the process is getting in the way, you need to either adapt the process for your purposes, or find a new process. Did you set New Year’s Resolutions? If so, share them with me! If not, did one of these three things contribute toward that decision? Or was it something else, entirely?