New Year Goals That Smell Like Paper and Possibility

Written like a note, Flowers are for more than being pretty" with pressed flowers beside the note.

There’s something about the new year that makes us all want to plan. Not the rigid, color-coded, must-achieve-everything kind of planning—but the softer kind. The kind that starts with a stack of seed catalogs, a pencil, and a cozy spot on the couch.

If you ask me, flipping through seed catalogs is one of the best ways to ease into goal setting for the year ahead. No pressure. No deadlines. Just glossy pages full of possibility. Tomatoes in every shade of red, beans that climb higher than your fence, and, my personal favorite, flowers that are as useful as they are beautiful.

Because if I’m setting goals for the new year, they’re going to be the kind that bring joy and serve a purpose.

Written like a note, Flowers are for more than being pretty" with pressed flowers beside the note.

Choosing Flowers With Intention (and a Little Whimsy)

When I browse seed catalogs, I’m always drawn to the flowers first. Maybe it’s because winter feels long, or maybe it’s because flowers promise color when everything outside is still gray. But these days, I’m not just choosing flowers because they’re pretty. I’m choosing flowers that earn their keep.

Edible flowers are where beauty and practicality meet, and they’ve become a quiet goal of mine each year: grow things that delight the eye and end up on the plate.

Calendula with its sunny orange petals. Nasturtiums spilling over the edge of a raised bed, peppery and bright. Violas and pansies that look like tiny works of art, and taste just as good as they look scattered over a salad.

As I dog-ear catalog pages and scribble notes in the margins, I’m not thinking in terms of “production goals” or “maximizing yield.” I’m thinking about how I want my garden to feel. Cheerful. Useful. Abundant in small, everyday ways.

Fresh Flowers: More Than Just a Pretty Face

One of the things I love most about growing flowers, especially edible ones, is how many uses they have once they’re picked.

Fresh flowers on the table instantly make an ordinary meal feel special. A handful of calendula petals tossed into rice. Chive blossoms pulled apart and sprinkled over eggs. A simple cake dressed up with violets and a dusting of sugar. These aren’t fancy, complicated things—but they feel luxurious because they’re fresh and homegrown.

And it doesn’t stop at the kitchen.

Many edible flowers double as herbal helpers. Calendula for salves and skin care. Chamomile for calming teas. Lavender for sachets, syrups, and that unmistakable summer scent tucked into drawers and linen closets.

Growing flowers means beauty in the garden, nourishment in the kitchen, and usefulness in the pantry and craft space. That’s a goal I can get behind.

Gentle Goals Grow Best

I think that’s why seed catalogs feel so comforting this time of year. They invite us to dream without demanding perfection. You can circle twenty varieties knowing full well you’ll only plant ten. You can change your mind. You can try something new just because it looks interesting.

Setting goals this way: slowly, thoughtfully, with room for joy; feels like a better way to begin the year.

Maybe your goal is to grow one new edible flower you’ve never tried before. Maybe it’s to actually use the flowers you grow instead of just admiring them. Or maybe it’s simply to sit down with a cup of coffee and enjoy the process of choosing, imagining, and planning.

Those count too.

As the new year stretches out ahead of us, I’m choosing goals that bloom where they’re planted. Goals that smell like fresh paper and garden soil. Goals that remind me that beauty and usefulness don’t have to be separate things.

Sometimes, they grow best side by side.

 

Other posts you might enjoy:

Indoor Winter Gardening

SecondTimeAroundHomestead on Skool

Gardening and Growing

 

4 Comments

  1. I like to just have a guideline on what I hope to do based on doing more of what worked and less of what didnt work and keeping possibilities open…. as they say nothing is written in stone, especially not new year goals

    Now excuse while I watch the rocks in my garden 😆
    ~B

    1. This is pretty close to what I do as well whether it’s lesson plans or goals. There is a loose timeline to allow for the things that come up, and specific links or details as applicable. Learning from past experiences is key, no matter what!

Leave a Reply