2026 Goals & Dreams and 2025 Year Review
Find out how I did with the goals I set last year and what my hopes and dreams are for 2026 in the areas of personal, home and financial, and business. It’s motivating to set goals, even if you don’t make them all, as a way to look at what we have accomplished and how we’d like to take steps forward in our simple homemade lives, no matter how big or small.

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As I sat down to think about this annual review of the goals I’ve set every year since the beginning of An Oregon Cottage back in 2009, I actually wondered if I should continue with them. Does anyone read them? Does anyone care? Is it helpful?
Because I’ve seen a number of people this year declare they aren’t setting any goals and stating it in a way that was self-affirming, as if they’d been forced to it or something. And if that’s the feeling, then, yeah you should probably take a break.
Setting Realistic Goals & Desires
But I want to be clear that goals (or habits, or dreams, or desires, or whatever you choose to call them) have never been about long, detailed lists to check off, strict guidelines with definite outcomes, and feelings of failure to me. And I hope I’ve communicated that through the years!
Goals are about taking small steps (cutting back on sugar, making room for reading or creating) and sometimes large ones (buying that house, taking that trip) that move us along to the life we wish for and the things we hope to do.
I spent many years never making any intentional goals. But I got to a point in my life (right around the time I started this website) where I looked back and was disappointed at the things we hadn’t done, the books I hadn’t read, the places we hadn’t gone.
Now this wasn’t a huge failure or anything – we had renovated two houses on a minimal budget, were raising two great kids, and had minimal debt, and good friends and family relationships – but I was saddened that I had let life just sort of happen and hadn’t taken full advantage of the time we were given.
So I made goals. To read more (from 0 to 100 books in 5 years). To travel (we showed our kids the beautiful Pacific Northwest, took ourselves to Greece, the Caribbean, and more). To finish house and garden projects (so many that became part of the blog). To get healthier (which prompted this series and book). And to move the website and my business to become more useful to you, my online friends.
The Difference Goals Can Make
Looking back I’m so glad I started the tradition of making goals. Is it perfect? No. I’m the first to admit I don’t always do the quarterly 6-month check-ins and the goals aren’t always at the top of my mind. Do I reach them all? Of course not – but I’ve always said that’s not the point, sometimes the goal wasn’t even the right one to begin with, but making it and discovering that it wasn’t right is useful and helps point us in the right direction.
The goals I’ve made through the years that have stuck so that they are now habit-like have brought the most joy and blessings to my life. They include things like:
- Monthly Trips: I can honestly say I wouldn’t have thought to plan out a years worth of monthly trips/outings without setting a goal. And it’s been life-fulfilling and even life-changing. Sometimes it involves a plane and travel with a capital T, sometimes it’s just an overnight somewhere – and sometimes it’s simply an afternoon picnic and paddle at a nearby lake. But without the plan? I doubt they would happen because we aren’t spontaneous and it’s easy to just get caught up in everyday life and routines. But having something to look forward to almost every month of the year? Joy.
- Savings: Without goals to save certain amounts in both retirement and regular savings I’m again not sure where we’d be. I mean, I’m sure we’d have something, but when we made a goal in this area (this was a joint goal for me and Brian), we primed ourselves to be ready to give up some things to make room for it. Without the goal, we simply wouldn’t have thought about giving some things up, I’m sure.
- Movement: Once I wrote down the goal of some type of exercise 5-6 times a week, I searched for different things I would actually stick with (strength training and HIIT or walking for me) and it became simply what I do in the mornings. In other words, a habit.
- Reading: You probably guessed I would add this since it’s my poster child when I talk about setting goals, lol. When I realized in 2014 that I went a whole year without reading even one book – me, who had read (sometimes voraciously) since middle school – I was shocked. Since I found so much joy in reading, I made a goal to read at least one book a month. Because of that, I started searching out ways to get books (we lived rurally, so I had to be creative), ways to read more, and habits to develop to fit in reading. Without the goal? I probably would’ve read a book here or there, but that year I made a goal to read 12 books, I actually finished 31! The goal made it something I thought about and sought out ways to make it happen.
And guys, that’s what I think is key here: making goals, dreaming dreams, writing down your hopes – they put what you’d like to do in the forefront of your mind so that you are actively thinking about ways to make them happen. Even if it’s slowly over many years.
And so I’m here once again to share my goals, reviewing the previous year and looking ahead to the next. There are ups and downs, some goals were met, some were changed, and some are moving to yet another year. But it’s all good – and it’s all part of our SIMPLE homemade life (no “big, scary” goals for me – just one step in front of the other to the life we dream aboutš).

Quick 2025 Year Review
Personal goals: I met most of these by at least half if not the entire year. The major misses were wanting to read apocryphal books (I tried but they were really weird to me, so I concentrated on the Bible and Christian living books – some of which made it to my best books list) and working only 3 days a week. There are seasons through the year where that works, but mostly I still need at least 4 days and sometimes 5 to get everything done. Which was a good thing to learn, and I’ve added a new goal that I think will be more doable throughout the year.
Home & Financial goals: The big wins for the home were finishing the laundry room and starting the kitchen side porch (yay!), the big loss was yet again not moving forward on our stalled upstairs landing (ugh). So, yes, it will be on the list again. We made a big trip was to Glacier, so fun, but we dropped the ball again on estate planning (though to be honest, Brian’s been overwhelmed with his family estate stuff after his mom’s death and there’s only so much brain band-width for that).
Business goals: I updated my Oregon Cottage Shop and added not one, but TWO physical cookbooks and had a profitable sale of them in November(and wonderful feedback š). A highlight for sure. I did an okay job planning more in advance, but didn’t really move forward with a solid email plan. I want any emails I send to be useful and welcomed and not just noise, so I may have spent too much time thinking about this and not enough in doing, lol.
2026 Goals
Personal
- More Bible and prayer time in the mornings with journaling. I want to spend more than just a cursory few minutes, to really think about how what I’m reading can impact my life.
- At least 26 minutes walking 5 times a week. 26 minutes for 2026, get it? This is in addition to my daily workouts and is usually happening after lunch (I started recording this on January 1).
- Strength train 3 times a week. Continue progressive overload weight training.
- Grind my own grain. Since I bought a mill and grain a year ago and have yet to grind any, I figured I better make it a goal, lol.
- Creative/craft days on Fridays at least 2 times a month. This is what I’m hoping to make happen this year after realizing that weekly days off regularly weren’t feasible. This is important to me because there are specific DIY’s I’ve wanted to get done for literal years that aren’t happening without a goal including:
-Paint and recover my office chair.
-Recover guest room chair (I think it’s a 30 minute project!)
-Upholster (or deconstruct?) Brian’s grandmother’s chair as well as sew new covers for our outdoor furniture cushions.
Home & Financial
- Upstairs landing finished! I have no words to explain why this isn’t done yet.š³
- Kitchen porch finished. This is moving along and I’m SO excited.
- New greenhouse (and learn how to start seeds in it). I’ve given up the idea that we’d make one with salvaged materials (Brian’s heart just isn’t in it) and ordered a small one from Costco that fits the cemented area we have. Which means it can be put together and ready to go to grow this season’s seeds – yay!
- Road hedgerow improved. Install water system, mulch, and deer protection. Without these things the shrubs will just continue to be stunted.
- Continue monthly trips and plan an overseas trip. After going to Ireland, I was burned out on international travel and all the planning that went with it. It’s been a few years and I long to go to more of Europe, so this year I hope to plan this for us.
- Meet with an estate planner. #1 on our to-do list now.
Business
- More useful physical cookbooks. A reader poll asked for pantry staple recipes, so that’s next on the list and we’ll see from there!
- More intentional email plan. Again, useful is the keyword, but also, fun? Like a cooking challenge with a gift card involved? More behind-the-scenes?
- Update garden planner and content. I’ve been wanting to do this for a couple years, so this is the year! As well as sharing garden and some DIY things more regularly again.
- More quick, inexpensive pantry recipes. I’m having fun with this series and I hope you are, too – especially as food prices have gone up this past year.
- Continue updating older recipes. Some are classics that just need a refresh after years of being on the site (a few left from 16-17 years ago when I first started!).
What would YOU like to see here in 2026? Leave a comment and let me know!
In February I will have written on this site for 17 years, a number I actually can’t believe. Things are changing rapidly in the online world (last year was particularly hard for small, independent websites like mine with AI taking so much of our traffic) and I honestly don’t know what the future will hold now.
BUT I am still here and able to work this as a job because of your visits, sharing, and support of An Oregon Cottage and I THANK YOU from the bottom of my heart. It’s a joy to communicate and share with you and I pray I can continue to do this work with you, even if I have to pivot.
Here’s to 2026! xo, Jami
Curious about past goals? You can see them all here.
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Hi Jami. I can imagine that there are many times you wonder if you are talking to anyone that is really out there listening to you. For me, the answer is yes. It was reading your column that I gained the courage to start and enjoy canning. My garden abundance of asparagus, and the dislike of its texture after freezing, had me try pickled asparagus spears this past spring. My husband has decided they are a snack and salad additive hit. This fall was the third season that I put your apple butter recipe to work with all the apples from our three trees. I canned pickle relish from my cucumbers and loved the freshness over store bought. Now you are talking about this year’s planting. I am right there with you. I am in zone 7 Arkansas so am just starting the seed catalogue search. Have a year-old greenhouse that I need to figure out how to time starts right. Last year my early plantings froze in an overnight freeze. Green house keeps them covered but not warm. Maybe warming mats would help? Anyway, I am entering that call of spring planting, and many of your articles as well as recipe ideas on how to prepare what I grow are very encouraging and helpful. Have a beautiful year and thanks for your help.
This is SO good to know, Michelle – thank you so much! Very encouraging. š And it seems like we’ll be figuring out greenhouses together this year! I know some heat their greenhouses, but I’m hoping to just use heat mats and grow lights to add enough warmth to keep the starts from freezing.
Here’s to a fun and productive year!
Thank you for this post. I definitely like keeping up with what you’ve been doing!
I really need to do monthly adventures with hubby and/or kiddo. It’s so easy for the time to just slip away. Thanks for the great idea, and happy new year to you.
Thanks for letting me know, Corrie!! And I’m so glad that inspired you – it’s been really good for us. š
I like this post about setting goals. I have found goals to be helpful in my own progress even if I donāt accomplish them or even if they change.
I’m glad this resonated with you, Lani, and that we feel the same about setting a few goals. š
You have the best basic bread recipe that gave me confidence to make bread again. Your recipes turn out every time. Today I will make homemade hamburger buns! You inspire me! Thank you for publishing physical books to purchase , they are great.
What a wonderful comment to start my day, Scarlet! Thank you so much – I’m thrilled that you are making bread and I could have a hand it in. š And I’m so happy you like the cookbooks!!
I look forward to your posts about yearly goals, and your Good Things posts are my favorites! Your emails are a bright spot in my days!
That’s so great to know, Donna, they are some of my favorite to write!
Estate planning, health proxy etc is on my list as well for 2026. Itās a must for us as we have procrastinated on this way too long. I would like to add regular stretching and core exercises to my workout schedule.
I love your content especially your meal plans and list of meals you plan to make. Your pantry series has been great and I look forward to that continuing!
I love your summary emails with what you have been watching, reading and using. I trust content makers who I have followed for awhile and love to hear about their tried and true as well as new discoveries. This past holiday I got the free bee silk bar and then bought some to gift, which I would not have discovered without your email linked to the blog post. I love the reminders that good food, gardening and reading are part of a well lived and well loved life!
Thank you so much for taking the time to share this. You and I are thinking alike on these goals, that’s for sure. And it truly means more than I can say to know that my content is helpful and something you look forward to. Hearing that you discovered the beeswax wraps through the blog and were able to gift them makes my heart happy, too. š
My goal with this space is to encourage that good food, gardening, and reading are part of a well lived and well loved life, like you say, and Iām so grateful youāre here and cooking, reading, and living alongside me! xoxo
Jamiā I have only been āconsumingā internet material since 2012 and your blog/website was one of the first I read, and more importantly itās the ONLY one Iāve stuck with over the years. I have made several of your recipes and always refer to āmy friend in Oregonā as the place the recipes come from. One of my current favorite reads from you is your Good Things list. I donāt know how often you write it now, but I always look forward to it. I also appreciate your book reviews with honest info regarding language and sexual content that I feel I can trust. Keep up the amazing work! Thank you for continuing to do what you do.
Oh, Kari, you are dear to me – thank you for being here all this time, YOU are truly the reason I’m still here, too. š I’m so glad to know what you appreciate reading here, so please keep telling me what you’d like to see from me!
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Jamie, I appreciate you and your communications. Aside from a couple news-type subscriptions, yours is the only one on “real life” that I keep. I read every communication, and use several of your recipes on a regular basis. A couple times this year I ordered products from Amazon that you recommended, and I’ve read several of the books you recommended this past year. I appreciate how down to earth and relatable and simple (in a very good way) your site is for me. So thank you.
Dorothy Krembs
Thank YOU for regularly reading, Dorothy – you help me to still be able to do this!! I’m so thrilled to know those things have been useful to you because I don’t always see who buys what or if what I write is always resonating. It helps me so much to know this.