When I gave up smoking in 1978, it happened in September, not January.
Still, most people decide to start to change their lives on Jan. 1, and that's fine, too. It means that, for most of January, Atkins bars and shakes are on sale, and I have to wait 15 minutes at the Katz JCC in Cherry Hill for a vacant elliptical machine.
By February, I can walk in and do my 35 minutes on the elliptical without waiting, though I'll pay full price for Atkins bars. The world is full of trade-offs.
I tend not to follow the crowd, so when I'm inundated by countless news releases telling me what to expect in the next year, I tend to deep-six them.
This one made me laugh, though, so - as a treat from me to you, for whatever holiday you celebrate - here is what JWT of New York, which represents public-relations accounts ranging from Schick to Shell, tells us to expect in the coming year:
Marriage optional. Now, they tell me. After 32 years, I wouldn't trade my wife for anything - even a contractor-grade table saw - but JWT says, " 'Happily ever after' is being redefined as a household of one, cohabiting, or single motherhood." The latest census data found that 30 percent of all U.S. adults had never been married, the highest percentage in 60 years.
Everything's becoming a screen - from outdoor ads to menus to walls to mirrors to floors - and we'll increasingly be able to interact with those surfaces, too, by touch, motion, or mobile devices. iPad, iPad on the wall, who's the techiest of them all? Interactive mirrors are appearing in changing rooms. Customers can try on items, request assistance, and snap photos to send to friends. Too much information? Yes.
Food as "eco-issue." As more regions battle with food shortages and spiking costs, smarter practices around food will join the stable of green "best practices." Let go my eco. In my house, we interview the chickens before we eat the eggs, the turkey before we make meatloaf . . . you get the picture.