Gentle January: Letting Go of Resolutions That Don’t Serve Disabled Bodies

Gentle January: Letting Go of Resolutions That Don’t Serve Disabled Bodies

Posted by Spoonie Threads Staff on

Every January, the pressure starts early. New goals. New habits. New routines. Messages everywhere insisting that change must be immediate, measurable, and relentless. For many people, this season is framed as a reset—a chance to “do better” or “be healthier.”

But for disabled people and those living with chronic illness, that narrative often misses the mark.

January can already be a difficult month. Cold weather can worsen pain, fatigue, and mobility challenges. Shorter days can affect mental health. Access to care may be disrupted by insurance changes or scheduling delays. Adding rigid resolutions on top of that can feel less motivating and more overwhelming.

This is where Gentle January comes in—a quieter, more compassionate approach to the start of the year that prioritizes sustainability, self-trust, and care over productivity.

Why Traditional Resolutions Often Don’t Work for Disabled Bodies

New Year’s resolutions are typically built around ideas of consistency, discipline, and control. They assume bodies that behave predictably and energy that can be pushed through resistance. For people with chronic illness or disabilities, those assumptions don’t reflect reality.

Many disabled bodies are dynamic. Symptoms fluctuate. Energy levels change daily—or even hourly. What feels possible one day may be inaccessible the next. This isn’t a lack of willpower. It’s simply how bodies with complex needs function.

Research on goal-setting and chronic illness shows that overly rigid expectations can increase stress, feelings of failure, and burnout. When goals don’t account for variability, they can quietly reinforce shame—especially when rest or adaptation is framed as “giving up.”

Letting go of resolutions that don’t serve disabled bodies isn’t about lowering standards. It’s about choosing frameworks that respect how bodies actually work.

Gentle January Is Not About Doing Nothing

Gentle January doesn’t mean abandoning growth or ignoring personal needs. It means shifting the focus from transformation to attunement.

Instead of asking, What should I change?
Gentle January asks, What do I need right now?

Instead of rigid timelines, it allows for flexibility.
Instead of external expectations, it centers lived experience.

This approach is supported by disability justice principles, which emphasize sustainability, interdependence, and honoring body wisdom. It recognizes that care looks different for everyone—and that needs can evolve over time.

Reframing “Progress” in a Disabled Context

One of the most powerful shifts in Gentle January is redefining what progress looks like.

For some, progress might be learning to rest without guilt.
For others, it might be setting boundaries around medical appointments, work, or social commitments.
Sometimes, progress is simply surviving a hard season.

These forms of progress are often invisible—but they are no less meaningful.

Studies on chronic illness self-management consistently highlight the importance of self-compassion and adaptability. People who allow themselves to adjust expectations tend to experience better emotional well-being and lower levels of stress. Progress, in this context, isn’t linear—and it doesn’t need to be.

Letting Go of Ableist Wellness Culture

January wellness messaging often promotes ideals that exclude disabled people: daily workouts, strict routines, elimination diets, or “mind over matter” thinking. While these approaches may work for some, they can be harmful when presented as universal solutions.

Ableist wellness culture tends to:

  • Equate health with morality
  • Frame rest as laziness
  • Ignore systemic barriers to access
  • Overlook chronic pain, fatigue, and disability

Gentle January invites a different lens—one that values care over control and recognizes that health is not a personal failure or achievement. It’s a complex, deeply individual experience influenced by biology, environment, access, and support.

Choosing Intentions Over Resolutions

Many disabled and chronically ill people find it helpful to replace resolutions with intentions. Intentions are not rules. They are guiding values that can adapt as circumstances change.

Examples of gentle intentions might include:

  • Listening to the body without judgment
  • Prioritizing rest when needed
  • Seeking support instead of pushing through
  • Creating routines that allow for flexibility
  • Letting go of comparison

These intentions don’t demand consistency. They allow for pauses, changes, and rest—which are essential parts of sustainable care.

A Gentler Start to the Year

Gentle January is an invitation—not an obligation. It offers space to step back from pressure and reconnect with what feels supportive, grounding, or manageable right now.

For disabled bodies, starting the year gently isn’t a compromise. It’s a form of care.

Letting go of resolutions that don’t serve you makes room for something more honest: a relationship with your body built on trust instead of force. And that relationship—slow, imperfect, and responsive—is often far more meaningful than any checklist.

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