As I step into 2026, I’m carrying a deep sense of gratitude with me. 2025 was a year of blessings—some loud and obvious, others quiet and tucked into ordinary days. It wasn’t perfect, but it was meaningful. And for that, I’m thankful.
This past year reminded me that gratitude doesn’t always come from big wins. Sometimes it shows up in routines that hold us together, in lessons learned the hard way, and in moments we didn’t realize were shaping us until we looked back. I’m entering this new year with a full heart, not because everything went according to plan, but because I grew through it.
Now, as 2026 begins, my word is intentional.
Not hustle.
Not perfection.
Not “doing more.”
Just intention.
I’m a wife, a mom to tweens, a full-time work-from-home employee, and someone who shows up consistently to share and build with a community I truly treasure. These roles overlap, blur, and sometimes compete with one another. For a long time, I tried to juggle them by running faster. What I’ve learned is that speed doesn’t create balance—presence does.
This year, I want to live with more awareness in every role I hold.
As a wife, that means choosing connection even on busy days. It’s easy to let schedules, responsibilities, and exhaustion take the lead. Intention looks like small check-ins, shared laughter, honest conversations, and remembering that partnership is built in the everyday moments—not just the milestones.
As a mom of tweens, intention feels especially important. This season of parenting is tender in a quiet way. They’re not little anymore, but they’re not grown either. They’re figuring out who they are, and I’m learning how to give them space while still being a steady presence. In 2026, I want to listen more than I lecture. I want to be curious instead of reactive. I want my kids to feel safe being exactly who they are, even when it’s messy or confusing.
Working full-time from home has been both a gift and a challenge. The flexibility is something I don’t take lightly, but the lines between work and life can blur quickly. This year, intention means protecting my energy. It means setting clearer boundaries, honoring rest without guilt, and remembering that productivity isn’t the same as worth. I want my work to be meaningful—but not at the cost of my well-being.
And then there’s this community.
This space has grown into something I deeply value. It’s not just numbers or content—it’s real people showing up, learning, navigating life, and growing alongside me. In 2026, I want to continue sharing in a way that’s honest and helpful. Not polished for the sake of appearances, not preachy, and not performative. Just real experiences, practical insights, and encouragement that says, “You’re not alone in this.”
I don’t have all the answers—and I’m not trying to. What I do have is lived experience, lessons learned, and a willingness to keep learning out loud. That’s what I want this space to remain: a place where growth feels possible, not overwhelming.
Being intentional doesn’t mean every day will be calm or perfectly planned. Life will still be full. There will be deadlines, emotions, noise, and unexpected turns. Intention simply means I want to choose how I show up, instead of running on autopilot.
It means asking:
- Does this align with what matters most?
- Is this adding value or just adding pressure?
- Do I need to lean in—or let go?
Some days, intention will look like productivity and progress. Other days, it will look like rest, saying no, or choosing presence over performance. Both are valid.
As I welcome 2026, I’m not setting rigid resolutions. I’m setting a direction. One rooted in gratitude for where I’ve been and clarity about where I’m going. I want a life that feels aligned—not rushed. Purposeful—not overfilled. Grounded—not constantly chasing the next thing.
If you’re entering this year feeling hopeful, tired, excited, uncertain—or all of the above—you’re not behind. You’re human. And there’s space for you to move forward in a way that honors your season.
Here’s to 2026.
To intention.
To growth that feels sustainable.
And to choosing presence, one day at a time.
This blog post is part of ‘Blogaberry Dazzle’
hosted by Cindy D’Silva and Noor Anand Chawla
in collaboration with Sameeksha Reads.



Stepping into 2026 with intention instead of rushing felt so grounding, and your reflections on presence, gratitude, and choosing how you show up in all your roles really resonated with me. I’m inspired to be more aware and present this year too.
That’s a wonderful intention for the year ahead. Best wishes!
I love the word you picked – intentional. It is going to help you separate the must-dos and must-avoids. Wishing you a fabulous 2026!
A good intention is at the heart of every step that leads to productivity. More power for this year to you. May this intentional year work out as you have planned it.
I am even intentionally choosing hope strength and new beginnings this new year. Gratitude as you say is powerful.
This felt like the perfect reminder to slow down and choose what truly matters. So grounding and inspiring. Thanks
It’s great to see how choosing to be intentional itself allows so many new perspectives into our lives. You’re juggling a lot and hope that you’re able to enjoy whatever you choose to do.
If we choose intention, we can gather the courage to say no as well. But Auto-pilot just deactivates out brain-cells.
I absolutely loved how you mentioned intentions instead of resolution..way to go
I like the word you have picked up – intentional. As the world becomes more chaotic around us, intentionality really helps in keeping us grounded.
Love your take on the new year. Pure intension for the year to start.
This is beautiful… grounded, wise, and quietly powerful.
You didn’t chase grand declarations. You chose depth. The way you honor gratitude, growth, and the tenderness of everyday roles feels real… lived-in… earned. “Intentional” fits you. It feels steady, not loud. Reading this feels like exhaling slowly. powerful.
I feel doing things intentionally is such a powerful tool to keep yourself accountable. You end up doing things only because you want to. Not because there peer or societal pressure.