Why One Resolution Beats Ten
The average person makes 3-5 New Year's resolutions. Studies show fewer than 10% stick to all of them past February. The problem isn't willpower — it's spreading limited attention across too many habit changes at once.
Pick one. Do it properly. The wheel helps you commit to one thing instead of listing everything you've been meaning to change. Once you've spun, add only that resolution to your calendar, set a system for tracking it, and ignore the rest until next year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is picking a resolution randomly actually effective?▾
Surprisingly, yes. Most people fail resolutions not because they picked the wrong goal but because they committed to too many at once. A wheel forces you to pick just one, and the act of spinning creates a moment of commitment that feels more decisive than just thinking about it.
What if I land on something I've tried and failed at before?▾
That might be exactly what you need. The wheel picking it again is a reminder it's still important to you. Consider spinning again and treating it as 'revisiting', not failing — the approach might differ this time.
Can I add specific measurable goals instead of categories?▾
Absolutely. Instead of 'Exercise more', add 'Run 3x per week' or 'Walk 10,000 steps daily'. The more specific your wheel items, the more actionable the result.