It’s January 6th and I swear we’ve been in this month for at least three weeks already.
I don’t know who decided January should be a full 31 days long, but that feels aggressive. There is absolutely no reason for a month that cold, dark, and emotionally exhausting to last that long. February gets a free pass with 28 days, but January — the hardest one — gets the deluxe extended edition.
That seems unfair.
January always feels longer than every other month, and if you live anywhere north of “mild winter,” you know exactly what I mean.
The Holidays Are Gone and So Is Your Motivation
December distracts you. There are lights, food, get-togethers, shopping, baking, visiting, planning, and excitement. Even if you’re tired, there’s always something happening.
January shows up and it’s just… quiet.
No events.
No long weekends.
No reason to leave the house unless you have to.
Your brain goes from constant stimulation to complete silence overnight, and that emotional crash makes time feel slower.
Everything feels heavier. Harder. Slower.
It’s Dark, Cold, and Your Body Knows It
You wake up in the dark.
You come home in the dark.
The sun barely makes a guest appearance in between.
Your body runs on sunlight more than we realize, and when it’s missing, everything feels harder — your mood, your energy, your motivation.
And then you add the cold.
The kind of cold that makes your truck grumpy.
The kind of cold that makes snow feel heavier.
The kind of cold that makes even quick errands feel like work.
Every task takes more time and more effort, so your days feel longer.
Winter Is Mentally Tiring Even When You’re “Not Doing Much”
You’re not lazy.
You’re in survival mode.
You’re layering clothes.
You’re scraping ice.
You’re shoveling.
You’re keeping fires going.
You’re watching fuel levels.
You’re paying heating bills.
It’s a low-grade, constant effort that wears you down quietly. And when you’re tired — even in a subtle way — time slows down.
January Is the Month of the Money Reality Check
January is when your bank account reminds you that December happened.
Heating bills arrive.
Credit cards wake up.
Groceries suddenly feel more expensive.
So you pull back. You stay home more. You spend less. You cut out extras.
Which means fewer distractions and fewer “fun” days — and again, time slows down.
Your World Shrinks in Winter
In summer, life has variety.
In winter, especially January, your world gets smaller. Same roads. Same rooms. Same routines.
And repetition messes with your sense of time. When your days look the same, your brain has nothing to measure time against — so everything feels stretched.
It’s Not You — It’s January
January isn’t long because you’re lazy.
It isn’t long because you’re unmotivated.
It isn’t long because you’re doing something wrong.
It’s long because it’s dark, cold, quiet, expensive, repetitive, and emotionally draining.
You’re not behind.
You’re not broken.
You’re just in the hardest month of winter.
And that’s allowed to feel heavy.
So if January feels endless, slow, or harder than it should…
That’s not a personal failure.
That’s just living north of “mild.”
And one day, it will suddenly be spring — and you’ll forget how long January ever felt.
Until next time.









