June started yesterday. And whether you realize it or not, your brain did something it does at the start of every new month: it filed the past away and opened a clean folder.
Psychologists call this the Fresh Start Effect. Research by Hengchen Dai at Wharton showed that people are significantly more likely to pursue goals after temporal landmarks — new weeks, new months, birthdays, holidays.
Why? Because your brain creates "mental accounting periods." When a new one starts, past failures feel like they belong to a different version of you.
The first week of June is one of the strongest fresh-start triggers of the year.
Here's how to use it:
1. Pick one specific goal for June (not "be better" — something measurable like "work out 12 times" or "read 30 minutes daily")
2. Write this sentence: "Starting this week, the NEW version of me will _____ every day."
3. Put it where you'll see it every morning this week.
The Fresh Start Effect wears off after about 7 days. So you have until next Monday to lock in the behavior before your brain stops giving you the boost.
Use this week. It's doing half the work for you.
Kevin | TodayIsTheDay
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