Back in mid-life, I often celebrated New Year’s with three other families up in the snowbound Sierras. We concocted elaborate ceremonies—writing something you wanted to leave behind— a behavior pattern, a job, a person, what have you— and then throwing the paper in the fire. Then another positive resolution (or more) written on another paper, put into a bowl and then each randomly picking one and reading it and guessing whose it was. We probably threw in a little burning of sage, short Buddhist chants, drumming, ringing Tibetan bells or banging on pots and pans or both. Of course, the mandatory kiss at the stroke of 12— usually with our partners.
As we aged, all aspects of our lives grew simpler and that included the Resolutions Rituals. One of the families still hosted a party, but the full house at 8:00 pm was pretty cleared out by midnight, just a few of us out on the streets ringing in the year with our bell collection. Then came the idea of celebrating the New York New Year—9 pm our time! So it went.
Now most all of us simply stay home, go to bed at the normal time, and having failed for decades in most of our resolutions, wisely decided, “Why bother? If I wake up tomorrow morning, that’s victory enough!”
Here in our Indio family retreat, we also didn’t stay up past 10 and no group fuss was made one way or another. The rain continued this morning as it had for most of yesterday and mostly we puttered around, each doing our little routines. But after lunch, the rain finally stopped and my wife, children and I got out the door and left the grandkids alone (their choice) while we set out on a hike. A mile walk to the Indio Badlands and then a six-mile loop through this remarkable landscape where rocks looked like frozen waves, caught in stop-motion. The sun peeked out in the late afternoon, the almost full moon began to rise, the conversation flowed and at one point, I asked my daughter Talia if she had any resolutions. She said they were a work-in-progress and then asked me the same. And I came up with this:
“Keep going.”
I like it. Simple and to the point. Since I enjoyed most everything I got to do last year, it makes sense that I simply want to keep going with doing the things I love. Why make it more complicated?
The calendar indicates that (always health permitting) I certainly will continue to teach workshops to adults. In Singapore and Bangkok in January, Tennessee and Mississippi in March, New Orleans in June, China and California in August. I’m signed up for subbing in San Francisco in April, guest residency in a school in Toronto in May, so I’ll certainly keep working with kids. I plan to keep playing piano at the Jewish Home for the Aged, keep playing piano at my home, spending time with the grandkids in March and August and remarkably, with Zadie in February taking her to Japan!
All is lined up for me to keep reading, keep writing, keep showing up at No Kings Rallies, keep walking and biking (and possibly a May group trip to the Dolomites!). Just keep moving. Not just moving for the sake of random exercise of body, mind and heart (though all are important—today’s 8-mile-hike was just what I needed), but going with a sense of direction and sense of purpose. Going someplace that one can see on the horizon like the shining city of Oz, never, ever, quite arriving, but transformed in the journey by staying focused on the rainbow’s end.
So there you have it. Resolution 2026. Keep going.
