It’s that time again.
For many of us, the end of December is when we take stock — of our accomplishments, our blessings, our losses, our pants that stopped fitting comfortably somewhere after the last holiday potluck.
It’s a season where we examine our reading goals, our fitness stats, our self-made promises to work less or spend less or let auld acquaintance be forgot because we swore — and meant it this time — that we’d make no time for toxicity this year.
But as 2025 approaches, are people still making New Year’s resolutions? They are, although a lot of people are now calling them vision boards.
More than half of the 1,251 U.S. adults surveyed earlier this month for an AP-NORC pollsay they’ll make at least one resolution for 2025. Millennials and Gen Z were especially likely to be on board — about two-thirds expect to do so, compared to about half of older adults. Women are also more …