It’s the first week of January, and chances are you’ve already been hit with an avalanche of messaging:
“New Year, New You.”
“Crush your goals.”
“Start fresh. Reinvent everything.” etc…
The pressure is everywhere. Social media, inboxes, even well-meaning conversations with friends and coworkers are all urging you to do more. More habits. More goals. More productivity hacks. More self-improvement plans. More commitments.
But what if that’s the wrong approach?
What if real, meaningful growth doesn’t start by piling more on, but by taking some things off?
Welcome to a powerful reframe:
Before you add more, subtract.
Why Subtraction Might Be the Change You Really Need
We live in a culture of accumulation. If something feels off in our lives, the instinct is often to add something to fix it. A new routine. A new goal. A new app. A new diet. A new podcast.
But sometimes, the clutter isn’t just physical. It’s mental. Emotional. Energetic. And what you actually need isn’t more doing but less noise.
So instead of asking:
- “What should I start doing this year?”
Try asking:
- “What no longer serves me?”
That simple shift in question can change everything.
First, Get Rid Of Things That Don’t Serve You
Before you make a vision board or download another productivity app, take a step back. Identify the things in your life that actively drain you or misalign with who you want to become. For example:
- A draining commitment that no longer fits your values or season of life.
- A habit that numbs instead of nourishes.
- A belief that you’re only valuable when you’re achieving.
- A voice in your head that isn’t even yours (perhaps a critical parent, past boss, or cultural script).
- A tendency to say yes when your body and heart are screaming no.
Each of these subtracts energy from your life. Start there.
Use The Deathbed Test
Here’s one of the most powerful filters you can apply:
On your deathbed, will you be glad you gave your time and energy to this?
If the answer is no, it might be time to let it go.
Life is short. Time is precious. Energy is not unlimited. And if you want to live a life that feels aligned and meaningful, this kind of honest questioning is essential.
Subtraction Creates Space
Removing just one stressor, one obligation, one “should” can open up space you didn’t know you were missing. It can create room for:
- Clearer thinking
- Rest and recovery
- Creative ideas
- Deeper connection with others
- Joyful spontaneity
And only once you’ve cleared that space should you consider adding anything new.
When you do, choose with care. Let it be something that fits the life you actually want to live, not the life you feel pressured to perform.
Additional Strategies to Help You Subtract
If you’re not sure where to start, here are a few ideas:
1. Declutter Your Calendar Before Your Home
Minimalism isn’t just about closets. Look at how your time is being spent. What regular meetings, obligations, or routines could be paused, removed, or simplified?
2. Write a “Stop Doing List”
Everyone makes to-do lists. Try flipping it. Write down all the things you do that don’t support your well-being or long-term goals. Then make a plan to stop (or at least reduce) them.
3. Delegate or Automate More
You don’t have to do everything yourself. Can you delegate tasks at work? At home? Could you use tools (including AI) to reduce mental load? Freeing up even 30 minutes a day can make a massive difference over time.
4. Practice Saying No Without Guilt
Saying no is not selfish. It’s strategic. When you say no to things that drain you, you say yes to everything that matters.
5. Limit Digital Clutter
Unsubscribe. Mute. Delete. Curate your digital inputs so you’re not constantly bombarded with comparison, pressure, or distraction.
The Surprising Power of Less
It may seem counterintuitive, but growth doesn’t always come from doing more. In fact, many breakthroughs begin with a pause, a release, a letting go.
When you subtract what doesn’t serve you, you make space for:
- Clarity
- Peace
- Purpose
- Joy
This is how alignment happens. This is how you build a life that feels like yours.
Final Thought: Growth Through Letting Go
This year, your greatest transformation might not come from trying harder. It might come from creating space, clearing noise, and finally letting go of everything that’s been weighing you down.
So before you add more to your life, try subtracting first.
You might find that less really is the way to more.
I help people heal, grow, and create the life they deserve. Ready to begin? Book a Free No-obligation Consultation now.
— O.S. Michael