Community Corner
Can't Keep Your New Year's Resolutions? Blame St. Louis
A new analysis suggests a city's amenities and services may determine the success of New Year's resolutions, including in St. Louis.

ST. LOUIS, MO β New Yearβs resolutions are a little like umbrellas during a hurricane β theyβre easily broken. But a new analysis offers this bit of good news: It may not be a lack of commitment that makes you break resolutions, but where you live. In other words, blame St. Louis for breaking with your plan for 2019.
The personal finance website WalletHub looked at 182 U.S. cities, including the 150 most-populated cities, and compared their success in keeping common New Yearβs resolutions to get healthier, more financially fit, perform better at school or work, quit bad habits, and improve personal relationships.
Hereβs where St. Louis ranked in those areas:
Find out what's happening in St. Louisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Health resolutions: 85
Financial resolutions: 110
School and work resolutions: 130
Bad habit resolutions: 181
Relationship resolutions: 34
(Tell us in the comments: Whatβs your New Yearβs resolution for 2019? Help your neighbors in St. Louis succeed with some tips on how you plan to keep your word to yourself.)
Find out what's happening in St. Louisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In areas that donβt have sidewalks or nearby fitness centers, people may not feel encouraged to exercise, the site said, adding that if restaurant options are limited to fast-food joints, youβre less likely to eat healthy foods when you donβt cook at home.
βThese might sound like excuses to the boldest resolvers, but they genuinely can get in the way of self-improvement,β WalletHub said. βThatβs especially true if your motivation is low to begin with.β
In all, WalletHub looked at 56 metrics that also included the percentage of obese adults, the percentage of adults who exercise, household income, credit scores, unemployment, school performance in GreatSchools rankings, the percentage of adults who drink excessively or binge drink, the percentage of adult smokers, restaurants per capita and parkland per capita.
According to WalletHub, the top 10 cities for keeping New Yearβs resolutions are concentrated in the western U.S., mostly in California, with a couple of exceptions:
- San Francisco, California
- Scottsdale, Arizona
- San Diego, California
- Seattle, Washington
- Irvine, California
- San Jose, California
- Salt Lake City, Utah
- Austin, Texas
- Portland, Oregon
- Orlando, Florida
The bottom 10 cities for keeping New Yearβs resolutions, starting with the least successful, are:
- Gulfport, Mississippi
- Shreveport, Louisiana
- Newark, New Jersey
- Fort Smith, Arkansas
- Detroit, Michigan
- Jackson, Mississippi
- Huntington, West Virginia
- Augusta, Georgia
- Charleston, West Virginia
- Loredo, Texas
If youβre one of those people who canβt seem to keep New Yearβs resolutions, donβt beat yourself up too much. Youβre not alone, according to Jiuqing Cheng, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Northern Iowa.
βIt is not that uncommon that people cannot keep their New Yearβs resolutions, and I donβt think it is always a failure,β Cheng said in comments accompanying the WalletHub analysis.
For example, pregnancy can dramatically alter a familyβs life, he said. Or, people may lose their jobs through no fault of their own.
βWhen things change, it is reasonable for people to adjust their expectations accordingly,β Cheng said.
But all that aside, βa big reason that people cannot meet their goals is because they tend to underestimate the complexity and difficulty of the goals,β Cheng said. βThis is particularly true when the goals are complex and include multiple activities. For example, when planning to write a paper, if people simply focus on writing itself but do not take searching references, reading references, analyzing data, and/or seeking opinions from others into account, they would underestimate the time they need.β
To improve the chances of success, evaluate the complexity of goals and unpack them into specific steps, Cheng advised.
Arizona State University psychology Professor Adam Cohen suggested New Yearβs resolutions that focus more on others than on self.
βChanging our lifestyles is really hard,β Cohen said. βMaybe instead of trying to become slimmer, we could focus on accepting ourselves for the way we are.
βMaybe try directing that New Yearβs resolution energy, instead, to helping other people β to become more charitable or forgiving in the New Year,β he said. βThat might make a bigger difference in all of our lives, than trying to fit into smaller jeans.β
Photo by Renee Schiavone/Patch
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.