The Holiday Achievement Trap: Why You Don't Have to End 2025 "Strong"
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In this episode of Owning Pleasure As A Black Woman, we challenge the relentless "finish the year strong" messaging that floods social media every December.
I explore why hustle culture was never designed with Black women in mind, what it means to coast into the new year with intention, and how to release the shame around unmet goals.
Tune in as we discuss the invisible labor that never gets counted, why rest is a strategic decision rather than a reward, and what becomes possible when you choose to end the year whole instead of "strong."
If you're exhausted from constantly performing strength you don't feel, tired of measuring your worth by your productivity, or ready to give yourself permission to rest without earning it first, this episode is your invitation to end 2025 softly, slowly, and sanely.
Key Takeaways:Hustle Culture & Inherited Scripts
- Hustle culture assumes everyone starts from the same place of rest and privilege—but Black women carry invisible labor including emotional work, code-switching, microaggressions, family obligations, and generational expectations that never make it onto anyone's to-do list
- The inherited script of constant motion was survival for our ancestors, but what was necessary for survival then might be stealing your ability to thrive now
- Your humanity is more important than your productivity—you don't need to sprint through December to prove your worth when you've already proven it a thousand times over
Coasting Is a Strategy
- Coasting means honoring your capacity—choosing sustainability over spectacle and longevity over one last push that leaves you depleted in January
- Rest is a strategy, not a reward: you don't have to earn rest by overworking first or be on the brink of burnout to deserve a break
- Like gardens that go dormant in winter to bloom in spring, you are not separate from nature and need seasons of rest too
What Becomes Possible
- When you enter 2026 rested instead of running on empty, you start with actual clarity about what you want, energy to move toward goals with intention, and capacity to say no to what doesn't serve you
- Finishing "whole" instead of "strong" means you valued yourself enough to stop when you needed to and trusted that your worth isn't tied to constant productivity
Releasing Goal Shame
- You're not behind—you're entering a new cycle with more wisdom. Life happened, your capacity shifted, and you made the best decisions you could with the information and energy you had
- Growth that doesn't fit on a vision board still counts: hard conversations, boundaries set, days you survived when surviving felt impossible, moments you chose yourself, times you asked for help
- Making peace with your present reality doesn't mean giving up—it means you can want more AND accept where you are, which actually creates space for genuine movement
Gentle End-of-Year Rituals
- Instead of aggressive goal-setting, try: slow mornings with no agenda, release rituals (write down and symbolically let go of what didn't serve you), journaling your wins (even small ones), permission to sleep without alarm, or declaring a theme word instead of rigid goals
- Words like "ease," "peace," "alignment," "joy," "softness," "authenticity," "pleasure," "trust" can guide decisions without the pressure of specific measurable outcomes
Listen Now:
Ready to get inspired? Hit play to discover why you're allowed to end the year softly, how to release the pressure to constantly achieve, and what becomes possible when you choose rest over performance!
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