answer:Pick one thing from the wish-list, and store the list away in a drawer. Take that one thing and integrate it into your reminder system (whatever that may be – phone, paper calender, bathroom mirror, writing on hand). Agree to do whatever it is that you have chosen for today only. Just today. Then tomorrow, do the same thing. For example, if walking for 30 minutes per day is one of goals, just try to walk today. If you don’t have 30 minutes and you only have 10 minutes, walk for 10 minutes. Tomorrow, you will do the same. And then the next day. Doing develops the habit. It’s challenging to see it this way sometimes. We want to completely embrace a new habit before actually doing it, and we expect it to stick. Don’t try to convince yourself that you’re going to walk every day. You’re only going to walk today – and more specifically, right now. Eventually, you’ll have strung enough “right nows” together that the new activity has worked itself into the rhythm of your life in a way that habitual. Also, think about what you are asking of yourself. “I need to walk 30 minutes every day for the rest of my life”. Then, you likely add all kinds of “what if” scenarios that involve both positive and negative outcomes. That’s some heavy sh*t. But anyone can walk do something once. If walking for 30 minutes per day is your item on the list you choose, you are only committing to do this now. And that is far more manageable. No lifetime of worry or expectations to manage. Just now. Not that you need to concern yourself right now with the next step, but this would only involve repeating the process with the next item on your long list once the habit has stuck.