The Year Without Goals

It’s April. And here’s the thing I didn’t expect to say this year. I didn’t set any goals.

No word of the year.
No carefully mapped-out plan.
No “this is the version of me I’m becoming” declaration in January.

Just… nothing.

For a long time, I believed that goals were the structure holding everything together. That if I didn’t define where I was going, I’d drift. That progress required clarity, direction, and a measurable outcome.

But this year feels different, not in a dramatic way but a quiet shift.

More like a quiet shift. The kind you almost miss if you’re not paying attention.

When Goals Start to Feel Like Pressure

There’s a subtle weight that comes with traditional goal setting.

You write the list.
You commit to the outcome.
You attach timelines and expectations.

And suddenly, something that might have felt exciting starts to feel like an obligation, and then boom, boring, and it’s unexciting. And if you don’t follow through exactly as planned, it starts to feel like failure rather than an adjustment.

That part never sat quite right with me, because creative life, real life, doesn’t move in straight lines. It’s really just a loopdiloop – a chaos scribble with occasional pauses, and voila, it changes direction without asking for permission.

And sometimes the pressure to “stick to the goal” becomes the very thing that pulls you away from what actually matters.

What I’m Choosing Instead

So instead of goals, I’m making a list – and no, this is not a become more productive, or become better … well, ok, I do want to improve in some areas. It is a list of things I want to do, things I am curious about, and yes, some things I’ve been putting off.

But I want to explore things that are interesting, uncomfortable, and even a little exciting.

You might think it sounds like goals; however, there aren’t deadlines, there is no measuring for success or for failure … just a collection of experiences and intentions.

Because when you say “I want to do this”, instead of “I must achieve this”, that pressure… it hits different, like a space for possibilities.

The Shift I Didn’t Plan For

And maybe this is part of it. Here I am, adding something I didn’t map out at the start of the year.

I’m changing direction as I’m stepping deeper into surface design. And this isn’t an experiment or something I’ll do later… nope, this is something I am actively building into my work and my creative life.

And it wasn’t a goal because, remember, I didn’t actually set a goal earlier this year. I just decided this is what I am going becuase it feels good and aligned with how I’ve always created anyway.

The List

I had a list like this years ago. A simple idea. One hundred things.

Some big.
Some small.
Some practical.
Some are completely random.

And I remember how it shifted the way I moved through the year because, funnily, it did give me direction without boxing me in. It offered options and not expectations, and so I am bringing it back.

And this time, I’m letting it be messy, unpolished, incomplete, but also alive.

100 Things I Want to Do This Year

  1. Finish all current unfinished woodburning pieces
  2. Finish Immersion Course
  3. Get a massage
  4. Write a fiction book
  5. Create 6 seamless pattern collections
  6. Strengthen my core
  7. Complete 10 small burns (no pressure pieces)
  8. Design a signature moth + mushroom series
  9. Explore with watercolor
  10. Backpack the Triple Crown in Virginia
  11. Visit a museum
  12. Go foraging
  13. Finish “Make your Art” Course
  14. Create 5 placement prints
  15. Sign up for a trail race
  16. Learn botanical drawings
  17. Read one book a week
  18. Go camping with friends
  19. Write 52 Weeks for Fire and publish it
  20. Finish the book I started writing
  21. Hike Three Ridges (again)
  22. Practice playing the flute
  23. Go Tubing with my friends
  24. Visit all 44 State Parks that participate in the Trail Quest in VA
  25. Backpack in West VA
  26. Try a new-to-me cuisine that I haven’t tried before
  27. Start Trail Running
  28. Sign up for Mammoth March
  29. Add another location to sell my pyrography art
  30. Visit a botanical garden
  31. Work from a coffee shop
  32. Take myself out on a date
  33. Go to a concert
  34. Go to a beach I haven’t been to before
  35. Go to a soccer game
  36. Visit a historical town
  37. Finish my education program, I started
  38. Hike to see the sunrise – location to be determined
  39. Grow my own vegetables
  40. Make my own Greek yogurt
  41. Go to a Hockey Game
  42. Go on a picnic
  43. Visit broadway
  44. Refine and update one of my coloring books
  45. Train my dog to be less afraid of the world
  46. Go hiking with all of my dogs together instead of separately
  47. Ride my bicycle
  48. See a musical
  49. Go on an adventure road trip (no destination, just intuition as the guide to see where you end up)
  50. Do the Murder Mystery train ride
  51. Become wilderness CPR certified
  52. Go to a concert
  53. Revamp my space (office/studio)
  54. License my first surface design pattern
  55. Go to a comedy show
  56. Hike in North Carolina
  57. Visit a cave
  58. Take a class to learn something new
  59. Watch a movie not in my typical genre
  60. Take an overnight bike backpacking trip
  61. Go offroading
  62. Find a forest road to walk with my dogs
  63. Paint with acrylics
  64. Go to a horse race
  65. Walk my son down the aisle (cannot wait for this)
  66. Create a 2027 Calendar
  67. Draw insects in my backyard
  68. Declutter the house
  69. Visit a hot spring
  70. Go on a canoe trip
  71. Be part of an Author event
  72. Create a coloring book
  73. Write a letter and send it via snail mail
  74. reach out to a friend to connect
  75. Go to the Drive-thru theater
  76. Go to a Baseball game
  77. Stay in a Postcard Cabin
  78. Hike in West Virginia
  79. Go to a rodeo
  80. Clean out my wardrobe
  81. Visit a nature center
  82. Go to the Fair as a visitor, not a vendor
  83. Take a dog hiking from the SPCA
  84. Go sledding
  85. Go to a pilates class
  86. Visit a farm
  87. Visit a state I have not been to yet
  88. Make pasta from scratch
  89. Go apple picking
  90. Hike Old Rag Mountain (again)
  91. Take a pottery class
  92. Go horseback riding
  93. Swim with Dolphins
  94. Plant a tree
  95. Take a wilderness survival course
  96. Hike to a waterfall
  97. Get a tattoo (yes, another one)
  98. Visit friends and share a meal
  99. Go to Harper’s Ferry
  100. See Wild Horses

No Finish Line Required

I’m not trying to complete all one hundred (although that would be epic), but again, this isn’t the point of the list. This is a reminder that life is meant to be lived where deadlines and deliverables don’t exist.

I know some things will get done, some won’t, some will take on a life of their own, while others are already forgotten.

Let’s live life with a bit more intention without turning it into another to-do list to be conquered.

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