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Kids quitting New Year’s resolutions midway? 5 ways you can help them stick to their goals

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 22, 2025, 12:36 IST
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Kids quitting New Year’s resolutions midway? 5 ways you can help them stick to their goals

This is a common picture in several households: every January rolls around, and suddenly everyone’s got big ideas — kids and adults both. We make these grand New Year’s resolutions, but let’s be real, most of us barely make it to February. While adults often fail to follow through with their resolutions due to tiredness or unforeseen circumstances, kids tend to desert their “grand plan” in the midway — mostly because they get “bored.” For them, it’s not about lacking willpower. The real problem? The goals are too vague, too big, or just not exciting to them.

But when kids learn how to set the right kinds of goals, they pick up some pretty useful life skills — think self-discipline, planning, bouncing back when things don’t go perfectly.

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Why Kids Give Up on Resolutions

Most resolutions don’t last. That’s just how it goes. In fact, studies show only a handful of people actually stick to their goals, and the numbers drop even lower for kids. Adults usually throw in the towel by February, and kids do the same, especially when the goal is too broad or doesn’t really matter to them.

When a child says, “I’ll read more” or “I’ll be healthier,” it sounds nice, but what does it actually mean? There’s no road map. No way to tell if they’re making progress. Even the most enthusiastic goals can start to feel impossible, and that’s when frustration kicks in. But parents have a chance here. They can show kids how to break big dreams into steps that feel doable — and even fun!

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Start With What Actually Matters to Them

Kids are way more motivated when the goal is something they care about, not just what grown-ups want. So sit down and talk to your child: What do they really want to do this year? Maybe it’s reading a series of books, learning to draw, or getting outside more. Let them choose. When a goal feels personal, it sticks.

Psychologists say it helps to link goals to what kids already value. If your child loves stories, tie a reading goal to that. If they’re all about friendship, maybe a kindness goal makes sense. When there’s a real connection, kids don’t just set goals — they want to reach them.

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Keep Goals Clear and Doable

Turning “get better at math” into “solve three math problems after school every day” makes all the difference. That’s a SMART goal — Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound. Breaking a big goal into small steps helps kids know exactly what to do, and every little win builds their confidence.

And don’t underestimate the power of a sticker chart or a checklist. Kids love seeing their progress — stars on the fridge, stickers on a calendar, anything that shows how far they’ve come. It keeps things real and lets them see their hard work pay off.

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Celebrate the Little Victories

Kids want to know their hard work matters, not just the end result. There’s real proof behind this — small rewards and encouragement help new habits take root. Sometimes just saying, “You’ve really stuck with it, I’m proud of you,” can mean everything. Or maybe you mark a good week with a movie night. Even little family traditions can turn reaching a goal into something memorable.

When kids notice you care about their effort, not just the finish line, they start to believe that persistence gets noticed — even if the big win is still ahead.

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Support Matters More Than Pressure

Kids are way more likely to stick with goals when they feel you’re cheering them on, not hovering over them. Try turning goal-setting into a family thing: everyone picks something, and you all help each other out. Shared goals — like game nights or walks together — make the whole thing feel like a team effort. And if someone slips up? It’s just part of the process.

If your child hits a wall or loses interest, don’t push harder. Ask what’s tough about it. Talk it through, adjust the goal if you need to, and keep the focus on effort, not getting it perfect. That’s how kids learn to keep going when things get rough.

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Turn Goals Into Habits (and Make it Fun)

The real trick? Blend new goals into your regular routine. Read a chapter before bed. Walk after dinner. When these things become habits, they stop feeling like chores. As per experts, starting small, even just a few minutes a day, makes it easier to keep going and keeps the pressure low.

And as for what the parents should do, make it fun. Create vision boards aligned with your children’s tastes, write silly stories about the goal with elements that grab their attention, and set up friendly competitions. When kids connect their goals to something creative or joyful — not just an obligation — they’re way more likely to stick with it for the long haul.

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