Ever feel like you’re both behind and overwhelmed at the same time? The main goals you set are still half-finished, the day-to-day demands never pause, and December feels like it’s rushing at you faster than you can catch up.

I had that same thought myself last week: “There’s no way I’ll get to everything I set out to do.” But then I remembered what the research says – it’s not about doubling down on effort, it’s about choosing a different kind of structure. And the last quarter of the year (Q4) gives us a natural restart point. Psychologists call it the “fresh start effect”: when we cross a clear boundary (like the start of a new quarter), our brain feels a line has been drawn, and we can begin again.

Here’s what’s powerful: studies show that time-scarcity creates a tunnel vision effect — we focus on the urgent (fire fight) at the cost of what really matters. The antidote isn’t working harder; it’s using micro-structures that protect energy and keep progress visible.

Try these:

If-Then your next step: Decide in advance. “If it’s Monday 9am, then I’ll draft the team update.” These tiny plans double follow-through.

Two-minute resets: Stand, stretch, or step outside. Micro-breaks protect focus and prevent the spiral of fatigue.

One-line progress log: Each day capture: Shipped → Result → Next. Visible progress fuels momentum far more than big vague goals.

What if you finished this year not wrung out, but steady—and already positioned for a strong January?

Early December, I’ll be hosting a half-day Goal-Setting Workshop (online). Not another New Year’s resolution fad, but a chance – right in the middle of Q4 – to clear the noise and map your Q1 priorities (Jan–Mar 2026) before the holiday rush.

I’ll share details soon, but for now – save the thought. If you’d like to be the first to know when registration opens, just hit reply with “Workshop” and I’ll make sure you’re on the early notice list.