Heard it from a friend whoโฆheard it from a friend whoโฆheard it from another youโve been lurking aroundโฆ
I was reminded of it โ now usually referred to as โInternational Blog Delurking Weekโ โ by my friend Parul Thakur of Happiness and Food.
Origins of (Inter)national Delurking Week
International Delurking Week goes back even farther than most people think. It appears to have begun in 2006 as โNational Delurking Week,โ on a now-defunct TypePad blog referenced here, in (Inter)National Delurking Week, on From the Sticks. That would mean this is its 20th Anniversary! Thatโs a little bit of Internet history worth celebrating.

Itโs not really meant for us bloggers to delurk, although that might be a good idea, sometimes. I have let this blog lie fallow for months at a time, despite my best intentions โ my ongoing resolution โ to do better. Itโs really meant for you readers to drop by and leave a comment. Comments are really the conversational fuel we bloggers crave to keep going.
Fellow bloggers, feel free to grab a copy of this image and use it on your own blog โ just be kind and leave a link back to mine!

Welcome, 2026!
I said I wasnโt going to do thisโฆbut why not break a resolution before making one? Itโs so freeing, really โ a reminder that we really ought to be flexible, not irresolute. If our lives call for reprioritizing things, letting some goals go in favor of new, more important goals, letโs not cling stubbornly to those things that donโt serve us well.
I never said I wasnโt going to make resolutions, mind you. I said I wasnโt going to blog about them โ no one wants to know that for the tenth year in a row, I want to โlose weight.โ Or โread more.โ Orโฆwhatever clichรฉ thing I really do want to do but havenโt done when I said I was going to. Borrrring. (You know that really should be spelled โbooooooooringโ because itโs only the vowels we can hold that long when speaking or singing, and yet Iโll bet youโd read it as if it were some circle of ghosts on the front lawn โ a โboo-ringโ โ whatever that is.)
I digress. Iโm still not going to tell you my resolutions and goals โ until Iโve made real progress towards them. Suffice it to say I have some, and theyโre exciting. You should have some, too.ย Write them down. But remember the big difference between a โresolutionโ and a โgoal.โ You need both.
A โresolutionโ is an intention. Lose weight, be a better friend, learn a new language, publish a novel.
A โgoalโ is something more concrete. It should be SMART: specific, measurable, aspirational, realistic, and time-bound.
First, what exactly is the goal โ the specific outcome you want to achieve?
Second, how do you measure progress towards that final outcome?
Third, donโt make it too easy on yourself. โBrush my teeth every dayโ probably isnโt much of a goal, and it certainly isnโt an โaspirationalโ goal. Make it a bit of a stretch! (Okay, if dental hygiene isnโt your thing, maybe itโs a great goal. But you know what I mean. Make it a big goal โ for you. Not something like โIโm giving up brussels sprouts for Lent.โ)
That said, keep it realistic. โTravel to Marsโ is probably too much of a stretch goal for most of us. Make sure that achieving your specific goal is within the realm of possibility for you, given your other obligations, your resources, and the available time.
Lastly, give yourself a deadline and stick to it!! Seriously, no squishy deadlines. Squishy deadlines are for other people. Would you make excuses to yourself, like โMy dog ate my homeworkโ if you donโt even have a dog? Nahh, no excuses and no squishy deadlines. That said, be kind to yourself โ real excuses like, โI was hit by an 18-wheeler and Iโm currently lying in traction in a Level 3 trauma centerโ is a good reason to miss a deadline. Remember what I said, earlier, about being flexible when it comes to your priorities? Adjust accordingly. Give yourself a break โ or allow yourself time to heal from one.
So, returning to our โresolutionโ examples, letโs reframe those as โgoalsโ:
Lose weight: Lose 20% of my body weight [calculate how many pounds โ20%โ is and divide that by 52 for a weekly goal] by December 31, 2026. Go one step further: how can you lose what you need to lose every week to achieve this? Calories to eat to stay healthy and not gain weight, calories to burn through exercise โ how will you fit this into your daily routine?
Be a better friend: First, think about ways in which you have not been a good friend, or ways you could be a better one. Maybe we could all use โlisten betterโ but thatโs more of a resolution. โAsk two questions before speaking about myself, and really listen to the answerโ or โAsk my friends how I can help themโ would be better. โConsider what my friends need from meโ is good, and maybe that translates to something like, โHave lunch with Mary twice a month and pick up the tabโ or โrun errands for Bobโ to help a friend with mobility, memory, or transportation challenges.
Learn a new language: Try, instead, โLearn enough Italian to converse comfortably with a friend by studying Italian for 30 minutes a day throughout 2026,โ or โโฆby enrolling in a class at the community college.โ Consider your own learning style: do you prefer online or in-person learning? Try to frame your goal in a way that works for you.
Publish a novel: First, do you consider yourself a writer? If not, you might enroll in a creative writing class or workshop for beginners. Develop your skills. Next, figure out what genreย novel you want to write. Hint: start with the kind you most like to read, and read more of those. Figure out each step of the process. โWrite 850 words every day through April, then edit carefully during May and June. Share the draft with a trusted friend or three and identify 3 agents and 3 publishers that look like they might be interested while those friends are busy reading. Edit again once you receive feedback, and start sending it to those agents/publishers.โ There are so many ways to frame this one that it really is an individual thing, but the main point is to figure out where you are right now, and what steps will get you to where you want to be.
Your Turn!
Have you made any resolutions or goals for the coming year? Have you been successful with resolutions or goals in past years? Let me know in the comments.
Share your resolutions and goals or donโt. But do write them down and review them monthly. Be sure to record, regularly, all youโve done towards fulfilling them or itโs almost a guarantee youโll forget. Your future self will thank you as they marvel over all the things youโve managed to do in 2026!

I do think itโs a very personal thing so itโs okay to not share your goals/resolutions/intentions! I do hope you have a great year ahead, Holly and the year brings you all that you wish for! Thank you for sharing the little history behind the Blog Delurking Week!! I didnโt know that until I read your post!
Iโve been a regular on this blog, even though I blog intermittently and your authentic voice never fails to impress us all. Keep writing and sharing, Holly!! Have an awesome, fulfilling, happy and healthy year ahead. ๐
Hi! Thanks for being one of my regular readers, Esha. And for popping in to say hello now and then! That really does make my day, you know? I appreciate you.
I think my reason for not sharing my resolutions and goals has more to do with not wanting to be redundant or boring and not wanting to heap explanations or excuses on top of that should priorities and circumstances change. Goals achieved are more fun to write about. I hope they’re more fun to read when the time comes!
I will have a fun update soon. ๐ 2026 is off to a great start so far. I hope the same is true for you.
Hello Holly! Happy New Year! It was so interesting to read about the history of International Delurking Week.
I have goals and resolutions this year, too. Currently, they are living in my bullet journal, and some of them are already appearing in my days. And yes, like you, I think it would be boring to talk about each of them on my blog because, on some level, I fear judgment from others (aside from the judgment I give myself daily!). Iโve been recycling almost the same goals for the past few years.
I hope your 2026 turns out to be a spectacular one for you!
Iโm still evaluating my priorities for the year, but below is one resolution/goal Iโm considering. I agree flexibility is important, so who knows if Iโll follow through?
Resolution: Get more comfortable hosting guests.
Goal: Plan 4 simple โpartiesโ this year at my house. After: consider what went well and where improvement could be made.
That’s excellent! Let me know how it goes. I don’t entertain.
I don’t know if you can call what I’ve created resolutions or goals – I prefer to call them intentions and allow them to work on me rather than the other way around! ๐
Wishing you all you need to have a healthy, peaceful and interesting year, dear Holly.
Intentions and resolutions are fairly synonymous. Goals are more like things to achieve relative to those intentions.
I don’t think they act ON US so much as we act on them subconsciously once we’ve really formed them – not as some vague maybe-that -would-be-nice, but with some real commitment.
“Until one is committed there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffectiveness. Concerning all acts of initative or creation, there is one elementary truth…that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves. too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would otherwise never have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in ones’s favor all manner of incidents and meetings and material assistance which no man would have believed would have come his way.
Whatever you think you can do or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, grace, and power in it.”
W.H. Murray The Scottish Himalayan Expedition
It’s nice reading a blog from you after a long time. I always set goals and intentions and make wishes. I think that is the fun part. Then of course comes the actual work of achieving them. That is another story altogether!