What is a Word of the Year?
I see a word of the year as a quality, a felt sense of something, or a way of being that you’d like to invite more of in the coming year. It can act as a gentle guide — something to orient towards, return to, and weave into reflections throughout the year.
Choosing a word can be a gentle mindbodyspirit practice (no spaces intentionally here) — a way to invite deeper alignment, inner guidance, coherence, and attunement into your life. It becomes a thread through your days, helping you notice where you are in relation to your intentions, values, presence, and the rhythms of life within and around you.
I’ve chosen a word of the year for many years now, and I’ve found it especially supportive when combined with my way of living –in a mindful, compassionate & values-aligned way.
In 2025 I also began choosing a word of the month – each connected to my main word of the year. Having both has felt nourishing and grounding, and has been helpful on a variety of ways.
Part of the how I choose my yearly word is by reflecting on the year that’s coming to a close. This often includes exploring:
- What felt supportive?
- What went well?
- What was challenging?
- What do I want to invite more of
- What could I let go of?
Reflecting on the Year & Choosing Your Word
For me, this process begins mid-autumn and completes around the winter solstice – although my word often arrives earlier. I reflect in a compassionate, somatic way: combing body wisdom with cognitive understanding, embodying my compassionate self.
Reflection can reveal what you would like to carry forward into the coming year — strengths, qualities, practices — and what may be helpful to let go of. This can naturally lead into choosing a yearly word, a seasonal word, or words of the month.
End-of-year reflection can be really grounding and clarifying, though only if it feels okay for you. Some people find it supportive; others may feel overwhelmed, partly depending on what is currently happening in life.
There’s no right or wrong way to reflect, and there’s no pressure to do it at all. There’s also no set timing.
This time of year naturally calls us towards slowing down and turn inwards — especially when we tune into the seasonal rhythm of winter. The commercial pace of Christmas can pull us in the opposite direction, but reflecting (in whatever form) can be an invitation to gently pause.
As we reflect it can be helpful to remember our shared humanity – every year contains challenge and difficulty, and also moments of things like joy, connection, love, wonder and support; each in varying amounts. All of this is part of being human.
Somatic ways to reflect:
As you reflect, notice:
- What sensations are present
- What feelings and thoughts
- What your breaths like
You might explore by:
✨Travelling back through the year & noticing what events arise naturally — and how they show up in your body.
✨ Exploring the strengths and resources that supported you in challenging times & what helped you to thrive. Maybe also noticing what else could have been supportive, or what strengths it could be helpful to build upon
✨ Consider which practices, strategies or resources were helpful — and what might support you in the future.
✨ Look at the year as a whole, or in quarters, noticing: what was nurturing, what supported your energy & what drained it; and whether a word, image, colour, or piece of music captures your year.
✨Reflecting on your values — how they guided your choices, how have they been present, and where you’d like more alignment
✨Journalling in whatever way feels supportive
You can find more journalling ideas in my blog: https://unityphysio.co.uk/end-of-year-journalling/
How to Explore Your Word of the Year
There are many ways to approach this. You might reflect first, or go straight to exploring possible words. There’s no right way. Choose whatever feels right for you — there’s no rule.
Here are some steps you can use as a guide:
✨ Reflect on the year
If it feels supportive, you might use journalling or the practices above.
✨ Consider what you’d like to invite more of into your life
Write down any words that come to mind — qualities, feelings, ways of being. Questions you could explore:
- What would support me?
- What would I like to cultivate or build upon?
- What does next year call me towards?
(The word cloud image below might give inspiration — there are many more word possibilities, including flourish, thrive, confidence & flow)
✨ Notice how each word feels in your body
Pause with each one:
- What sensations arise?
- What is your breath like?
- What thoughts and feelings show up?
- How do you experience this word?
✨ Circle up to five words that feel most alive
Spend time with each one. Sense and imagine how how each word might support you over the coming year. Sit with them a little while and then let them be — often a word will make itself known.
✨ If you haven’t chosen a word yet, give it space
Return to your list of narrowed down words over the coming days or weeks. You might explore:
- How does each word align with my values?
- How would each word support the way I would like to show up for myself and others?
- How might they have supported me this year?
- How could it help having more of this?
- What small daily intentions could each one encourage?
✨ Check in again
Sit with the word you’ve chosen, or the few you’ve narrowed it down to (if it hasn’t quite landed yet). Notice:
- How do you experience this word, what do you notice as you focus on it?
- What sensations. emotions, or thoughts arise?
- Does it feel aligned with your values and your heart?
- Is it resonating with you?
- Is it a gentle yes, or a clear no?
- Does it feel like a warm, welcoming invitation to explore the coming year with?
It Doesn’t Have to Be a Whole Year
You might choose:
- A word for the first quarter
- A seasonal word
- A monthly word
- Or a yearly word supported by monthly ones
All of these can be equally supportive. The invitation is simply to choose what feels nourishing, grounding, and helpful for you.
Summary
There isn’t a right or a wrong way to do this. It’s about intention, compassionate awareness, curiosity, orientation, gentle guidance; and a way of listening inwardly as you approach the coming year.
If you choose to explore a word this year, I hope the process feels spacious, compassionate and rooted in your own wisdom.
