Just past the Solstice, we approach the season of resolve. Self-help programs proliferate and the parking lot at the gym will overflow. For some, holiday excess propels resolutions in thirty-one flavors of fancy, but like the ice cream they will just seem to melt away.
Digging deeper, we might un-package the concept of “resolution” with the intention of developing intention. That is to consciously and specifically choose a path, practice or behavior. Intentional living invites a ducks-in-a-row congruence between mind and emotion across decisions large and small. Clarifying values is no small part of the process, discovering to what degree our value system is not merely held but expressed everyday.
Values comprise our essential beliefs. They underscore commitment in “acceptance and commitment” therapies. Adhering to our personal values leads to committed action and the concrete steps necessary for resolve.
Religious traditions insert the sacred into resolve. Vows of marriage or upon entrance to a religious order are examples. Adherents to various religious traditions undertake vows too. Interestingly, the construct of these vows may wisely anticipate failure and, in some ways, the impossibility of attainment. After all, one might expect at least some blundering a long the way to transformation.
A word of caution: Resolve with the expectation of perfection without failure promotes discouragement, self-recrimination and a year of too many jelly doughnuts. Or whatever!
So what is the alternative? Aspirations small or grand are wonderful but insufficient. Our wisdom starts with understanding the impossibility of perfect achievement. It starts with the humility of accepting our human frailties and follies. But it must not end there, lest we lapse into self-pity and an endless succession of half-hearted and failed attempts.
Instead, with humility, we could vow toward dedication to a worthwhile goal like kindness with a loved one (or even a “difficult person”). Of course we will mess up and our shortcomings will throw us off track. But we must return again and again to the vow. It is because our imperfection is accepted that failure is understood as part of the way forward-and that only strengthens our resolution to stay the course.
To paraphrase one of Buddhism’s four vows, our path of resolve is unattainable. And we vow to attain it.