January 1 – Opening the Month with Intention

By | January 1, 2026

Dear Friends,

Today we begin by setting an intention for the month ahead.

At this time of year, we are often encouraged to make New Year’s resolutions – goals about what to change, improve, or fix. Resolutions tend to be future-focused and outcome-oriented. They can be useful, but they can also carry pressure: succeed or fail, keep up or fall behind.

An intention is different. Rather than aiming at a specific result, an intention can describe how we want to relate to our experience. You might think of it as an orientation, a way of facing whatever arises, rather than a plan for how things should turn out.

This month, our exploration of the elements – earth, water, fire, and air – will support this kind of orientation. The elements invite us to notice what is already here: solidity and support, flow and change, warmth and energy, movement and breath. They do not ask us to improve the body or control it. Instead, they offer a steady way to pay attention with care.

Working with the elements can support steadiness because they are reliable and always present. It can support care by shifting us from judgment to curiosity. And it can support insight by helping us see the body as part of the natural world – shaped by conditions, changing moment by moment – rather than something separate or fixed.

As you begin this month, you might consider setting a simple intention. Not something to accomplish, but a quality you would like to bring to your experience. For example:

  • To meet the body with curiosity rather than criticism
  • To gently stay connected to direct experience, even when it is uncomfortable
  • To relate with kindness when things don’t go as planned

There is no need to hold this intention tightly. Like a compass, it can quietly guide you, even when you lose sight of it for a while.

A stylized compass with a golden outer rim. The main circular face is a gradient of purple and white, giving a glossy, reflective appearance. At the center is a gold knob, from which two triangular compass needles extend; one is white and points northwest, while the other is red and points northeast. The compass rose is marked with cardinal directions "N," "E," "S," and "W," denoted by small letters around the rim. Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay

A brief reflection
Take a moment today to ask yourself:
What might change if I experienced my body as part of nature, rather than something I need to manage or perfect?
You do not need an answer – just notice what the question opens.

If you are so inclined, you are invited to share a word, phrase, or brief reflection about your intention or what this question brings up for you. You can reply to the email or comment below. Your reflections can quietly support others and strengthen our sense of practicing together.

Tomorrow, we will begin with the earth element, exploring qualities of solidity, stability, and support.

With good wishes,
Andrea

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