Tag: JanuaryReflection

  • What Stayed With Me This Month

    What Stayed With Me This Month

    January didn’t arrive with fireworks for me.

    It didn’t kick open the door and demand a reinvention.

    It sat down quietly and waited to see what I would do.

    Every year, January carries a certain pressure—the sense that you’re supposed to emerge from the holidays renewed, corrected, aimed in a better direction. As if surviving December isn’t an accomplishment in itself. As if rest only counts if it’s followed immediately by improvement.

    But this month didn’t ask that of me.

    And because it didn’t ask, I noticed more.

    What stayed with me wasn’t a resolution.

    It wasn’t a plan.

    It wasn’t the sudden clarity people like to perform this time of year.

    What stayed with me were smaller things.

    A kind of tired that didn’t feel like failure.

    The difference between being exhausted and being empty.

    The relief of realizing that not every ache is a problem to solve—some are just signals asking for care.

    What stayed with me was food that did its job without announcing itself.

    Meals that didn’t impress anyone but left me steady.

    Soup that didn’t look fancy.

    Chicken and cabbage in a single pan.

    Breakfast made from what was already there.

    There’s a particular kind of trust that builds when you stop chasing novelty and start paying attention to what actually holds you together. January reminded me that nourishment doesn’t need a spotlight. It needs consistency.

    What stayed with me were the stories meant for children that told the truth anyway.

    Felix learning that rest comes before effort.

    That nourishment matters more than appearance.

    That hard work has meaning when it serves something larger than ego.

    That staying—being present—is sometimes the bravest choice.

    Writing those stories reminded me that lessons don’t stop being true just because we age out of picture books. We just pretend we don’t need them anymore.

    What stayed with me was the question of work—the kind that doesn’t announce itself.

    The work of restraint.

    The work of not becoming what you oppose.

    The work of continuing without applause.

    Honoring Dr. King’s birthday this month brought that into sharper focus. Not the polished version of his legacy, but the disciplined one. The version that understood anger but refused to let it drive. The version that knew the dream was unfinished and chose responsibility anyway.

    That stayed with me.

    And maybe most of all, what stayed with me was permission.

    Permission to arrive slowly.

    Permission to trust what feeds me.

    Permission to stop fixing things that aren’t broken just because the calendar flipped.

    January didn’t make me new.

    It reminded me of what’s already working.

    As the month closes, I’m not carrying forward any goals. I’m carrying forward awareness. Attention. A quieter sense of direction.

    Not everything needs to be upgraded.

    Not everything needs to be optimized.

    Some things just need to be noticed—and kept.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • Nothing Is Required of You Yet

    Nothing Is Required of You Yet

    The year has barely opened its eyes, and already it’s being shouted at.

    Everywhere you turn, somebody is trying to sell you a clean slate. A new body. A new mindset. A new you—freshly scrubbed, perfectly organized, and somehow untouched by everything that happened before midnight.

    And maybe that works for some people.

    But for a lot of us, the first week of January doesn’t feel like a beginning.

    It feels like the aftermath.

    It feels like walking through your own house after a party you didn’t really want to host—cups in the sink, wrapping paper in the corner, a tiredness in your bones you can’t quite explain without sounding ungrateful. You made it through the holidays. That phrase is said casually, as if it’s just a calendar fact. But anyone who’s lived it knows the truth: the holidays can be a full-body experience.

    Even if you love the season.

    Even if you love the lights, the music, the movies, and the idea of togetherness.

    There’s still the stress. The logistics. The family history that shows up uninvited. And if you’re honest, you might have added pressure to your own back—trying to make it perfect, trying to make yourself perfect inside it.

    So if January feels less like a launch and more like a long exhale, let me say something that might sound almost wrong:

    Nothing is required of you yet.

    The Myth of the Immediate Reinvention

    January arrives with a checklist dressed up as encouragement.

    Start fresh.

    Fix yourself.

    Prove you learned something.

    But a year isn’t a courtroom.

    You don’t have to stand trial on January 1st for everything you didn’t do last year. You don’t owe the calendar a performance just because it turned the page.

    Many people enter January already tired—recovering from emotional labor, grief, loneliness, expectation, and survival. And then the world says, Now improve.

    That isn’t motivation.

    That’s pressure with better lighting.

    Permission to Arrive Slowly

    The first week of January is not for everyone to become their best self.

    Sometimes it’s for becoming yourself again.

    Slowness is not failure. Slowness can be wisdom. It can be how you tell your body, I’m listening.

    If you haven’t planned the year, that’s okay.

    If your goals aren’t mapped, that’s okay.

    If you already missed the version of yourself January promised you’d be—that’s okay too.

    Anything built on shame will eventually collapse.

    Rest as Foundation

    Rest isn’t something you earn after becoming impressive.

    Sometimes rest is repair.

    Sometimes it’s the quiet work of putting yourself back together after a season that took more than it gave.

    You don’t have to sprint into January to prove you deserve the year. The year will come either way. Your job is not to outrun it—but to meet it with your feet under you.

    A Softer Beginning

    If you want a beginning, start small.

    A glass of water.

    A walk around the block.

    A meal made slowly.

    One room made livable.

    Small is how trust is rebuilt—with your body, with your life, with yourself.

    Let the Year Be Young

    The most important things don’t begin with explosions. They begin with breath.

    If you’ve made it to this first week of January, you’ve already done something meaningful.

    So maybe the most radical thing you can do right now is let yourself arrive.

    Nothing is required of you yet.

    Not because you’re giving up—but because you’re giving yourself a chance.

    Let the year be young.

    Let it be quiet.

    Let it meet you where you are.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

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