
January arrives with a strange mix of energy and exhaustion. We’re emerging from the intensity of the holidays, yes, but we’re also buoyed by the promise of a reset. There’s something clarifying about the timeline flipping, the feeling that this might be the moment when things fall into place. Especially if you were part of the great “lock” This fall, chances are you’ve already thought about your goals, your routinesand the type of year you want to create. January doesn’t feel like a beginning, but a continuation.
Featured image of our interview with Aileen Fitzgerald by Michelle Nash.

How to choose your word of the year (and actually stick to it)
Even with this momentum, it’s easy to feel pulled in too many directions at once. Big intentions, half-formed plans, and the pressure to do everything — and do everything right — can quickly clutter what seemed clear just a few weeks ago. This is where choosing a word of the year can be so helpful. Instead of adding more goals, he suggests focus: a word that helps you decide what to say yes to, what to let go of, and how to move forward in your year with more intention.
This year my word is clarityand I approach it differently — not as a one-time ritual, but as an anchor that I’ll return to throughout the year. Ahead, I’m going to explain how to choose your word of the year and how to actually live it throughout the year.
What is the word of the year?
It will be a single word that you choose to guide how you want to live, feel and make decisions over the next 12 months. Rather than focusing on what you want to achieve, it focuses on how you want to approach your life: your goals, your routines, your relationships, and your daily choices.
What do I love most about choosing a word of the year? Its flexibility. Resolutions tend to be rigid and results-oriented, making them easy to abandon when life gets in the way. A word is something you return to, not something you complete. It offers direction without demanding perfection.
Think of your word as a lens, not a to-do list. You don’t check it off, you let it shape the way you view the year as it unfolds.
For this reason, a word of the year supports setting intentions without adding pressure. It gives you a clear reference point for deciding what to prioritize, what to simplify, and where to focus your energy, without turning into something else to manage.
To start
Start by writing down three words that appeal to you right now. Don’t think about it too much! These might be words you’ve noticed recently, qualities you crave, or themes that seem relevant to this time in your life.
Then, give yourself a day or two to sit down with them. Keep the list somewhere visible (your notes app, your desk, or in a journal) and notice how each word feels as you go through your routine.
Finally, pay attention to the word that keeps coming up. It’s often the good that shapes the way you think, what you notice, or how you make small decisions. This is usually your cue.
Questions to help you think
Do you feel torn between a few words? Or maybe you don’t know where to start. A little reflection can help bring clarity. It’s not supposed to answer these questions all at once. Think of them as prompts that you can return to on a walk, in your journal, or at the end of the day.
- What do I want more of in my daily life this year?
- Where do I feel overwhelmed or too tense?
- What is missing right now?
- What quality would help me meet challenges with more serenity?
- What word seems grounded and not demanding?
As you reflect, notice which words seem encouraging rather than aspirational. You’re not looking for something that looks impressive. You want to find a word that fits where you are and helps you move forward with a road map that you can always come back to.
What if nothing happened?
It’s good ! You don’t need to force this. If you haven’t yet connected to a word, give yourself a break. Sometimes clarity comes from noticing patterns rather than making quick decisions. Pay attention to what attracts you over the next few weeks: what you read, what you crave, and what seems heavy or light in your daily routine.
There’s also no harm in choosing a substitute word, something simple like ease Or to focus– and I’ll come back to that later. A word of the year is not fixed on January 1st. This is something you can come back to and refine throughout the year.
How to live your word every day
Choosing a word is just the beginning. What matters is coming back to it, not following it perfectly. Living His word does not require new daily routines or rituals. It works best when it’s simple and flexible.
Use your word as a filter. When deciding how to spend your time, what to commit to or what to let go of, ask yourself: Does this support my words or distance me from them? Even occasional check-ins can provide clarity.
To keep your word alive beyond January, try a short monthly reset:
- How has my word manifested this month?
- Where did I lose sight of him?
- What small change can I make next month?
Examples of Powerful Words of the Year
Remember: there is not just one right choice: only what seems most favorable to you for the season in which you find yourself.
- Clarity: simplify decisions, commitments and mental noise so you can focus on what really matters
- Ease: reduce friction in daily routines and choose what feels sustainable rather than what feels forced
- Presence: focus on what’s in front of you rather than what’s next
- Courage: act even when it seems uncomfortable or uncertain
- Trust: let go of excessive control and allow things to unfold more confidently
- Expansion: create space for growth, new opportunities and broader perspectives
If any of these words elicit a feeling of relief or recognition, pay attention to them. This is often a sign that you are on the right track.
Takeaways
Having a word of the year gives you something to return to when life seems busy, noisy, or distracting. The real value comes from revisiting your word again and again, using it to reset, refocus, and make small adjustments along the way. Choose a word that reflects how you want to live this year, not who you think you should be. This is where it comes in handy and where it tends to last.
The position How to Choose a Word of the Year You’ll Actually Live By appeared first on Camille Styles.
























