Years ago, in the thick of my accounting and consulting career, I treated January like a battlefield. Iād march in with a list of goals so long (and well-defined), even my calendar winced.
Every goal was measurable, trackable, and timed ⦠like a military operation. My goals were REALLY SMART!
And to be fair, I often achieved them. But it was exhausting. Something in my body ⦠and spirit ⦠felt increasingly off.
I didnāt realize it at the time, but I was leading myself the way Iād been taught to lead others: with precision, yes ⦠but without compassion.
And that model never really works long-term but in midlife, it suffers a complete breakdown.
āļø Midlife Goals Require a Different Kind of Precision
If youāve found that your usual āgoal-settingā methods donāt work anymore ⦠or worse, they leave you feeling defeated before February ⦠youāre not alone.
Hereās why:
In midlife, your bodyās stress response shifts. Your nervous system is more sensitive to overload. Your hormones ⦠especially cortisol, insulin, and estrogen ⦠respond differently to pressure.
When your system perceives a goal as threat rather than support, it resists. Not because youāre lazy or undisciplined ⦠but because your body is wisely protecting its bandwidth.
Thatās why this year, Iām inviting you to reclaim your goals ā¦
With kind precision.
š§ What Is Kind Precision?
This isnāt about being vague or āgoing with the flow.ā
Itās about creating direction that your whole self can say yes to.
Letās break it down:
Clarity
Know what matters most now. Not what mattered five years ago. Not what everyone else is posting about.
Clarity comes from listening to your bodyās wisdom, your lifeās season, and your genuine priorities.
Ask yourself: What actually feels worth my energy right now?
Compassion
Hold space for whatās hard. Midlife often brings caregiving, grief, career pivots, physical changes ⦠or all of the above.
Compassion doesnāt mean lowering the bar. It means adjusting your expectations so theyāre rooted in reality ⦠not pressure or perfectionism.
Ask yourself: Am I expecting myself to run on fumes?
Consistency
Choose small, doable actions that restore energy, rather than deplete it.
The nervous system loves rhythm. Simple practices like drinking water before coffee, stepping outside for 5 minutes, or journaling one sentence a day ⦠are not ātoo small.ā Theyāre sustainable signals of safety.
Ask yourself: Can I do this on my busiest day without resenting it?
š” What This Looks Like in Real Life
Letās say you want to ālose weightā this year.
A traditional goal might be:
āLose 20 pounds by March. Work out 5 days a week. No sugar.ā
A kind precision approach might be:
āRestore trust in my body by lowering stress and improving sleep. Move daily in ways that feel good. Reduce sugar gradually so my body feels steady and satisfied.ā
See the difference? One is rigid and short-term. The other builds a lifestyle aligned with your deeper values ⦠like energy, vitality, and peace.
āļø A Gentle Practice for This Week
Each morning, ask yourself:
āWhat would support my energy and intention today?ā
Then choose one thing. Just one.
Especially if it feels easy.
And if you miss a day? Thatās not failure. Itās feedback. Notice. Adjust. Continue.
Your goals are not a measure of your worth.
Theyāre a mirror of your needs and values.
And they can evolve as you do.
If youād like a roadmap of sorts that will help you start your 2026 journey, my Human Energy System Reboot is a great resource.Ā
Hereās to a year of deeper strength, softer starts, and goals that fit your life ⦠not the other way around.



