Let our New Year's resolution be this: we will be there for one another as fellow members of humanity, in the... — Goran Persson

Let our New Year's resolution be this: we will be there for one another as fellow members of humanity, in the finest sense of the word.

Author: Goran Persson

Insight: Most New Year's resolutions focus inward—lose weight, learn a skill, break a bad habit. But this one flips the script entirely. It asks: what if your real resolution was about showing up for people around you, not just yourself? That shift matters more than it sounds. We live in a time of peculiar isolation. We're more connected digitally than ever, yet loneliness has become epidemic. We scroll past other people's struggles while nursing our own. This resolution cuts through that by suggesting something radical but simple: genuine presence. It's not about grand gestures or martyring yourself. It's about recognizing that the person struggling next to you—whether a family member, colleague, or stranger—deserves your attention and care, just as you deserve theirs. The sneaky brilliance here is that this resolution actually serves you. When you commit to being there for others, you stop drowning in your own head. You build real connection instead of performative friendship. You create a community that shows up for you too. That's the fine print of human dignity nobody mentions: we can't actually thrive alone. Your best year probably won't come from solo achievement. It'll come from the people who had your back when it mattered.

Your best year needs other people

Let our New Year's resolution be this: we will be there for one another as fellow members of humanity, in the finest sense of the word.

Most New Year's resolutions focus inward—lose weight, learn a skill, break a bad habit. But this one flips the script entirely. It asks: what if your real resolution was about showing up for people around you, not just yourself? That shift matters more than it sounds.

We live in a time of peculiar isolation. We're more connected digitally than ever, yet loneliness has become epidemic. We scroll past other people's struggles while nursing our own. This resolution cuts through that by suggesting something radical but simple: genuine presence. It's not about grand gestures or martyring yourself. It's about recognizing that the person struggling next to you—whether a family member, colleague, or stranger—deserves your attention and care, just as you deserve theirs.

The sneaky brilliance here is that this resolution actually serves you. When you commit to being there for others, you stop drowning in your own head. You build real connection instead of performative friendship. You create a community that shows up for you too. That's the fine print of human dignity nobody mentions: we can't actually thrive alone. Your best year probably won't come from solo achievement. It'll come from the people who had your back when it mattered.

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Goran Persson

Goran Persson is a Swedish politician who served as the Prime Minister of Sweden from 1996 to 2006. A member of the Social Democratic Party, he is known for implementing progressive policies focused on social welfare, economic growth, and environmental sustainability during his tenure. After leaving office, Persson continued to be involved in various international and domestic initiatives, particularly in areas related to climate change and global development.

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