Happy New Year! It’s 2026, and with a fresh calendar comes a fresh opportunity to reflect, reset, and grow. New Year’s resolutions don’t have to be about productivity or perfection — they can also be about how we show up in our relationships, how we treat others, and how we understand ourselves.
If you’re someone who’s curious, imaginative, or interested in kink and alternative relationship dynamics, here are a few kink-positive New Year’s resolutions worth considering.
1. Resolve to Be More Open and Communicative
Being open-minded doesn’t mean saying yes to everything. It means listening without judgment.
People experience desire, curiosity, and connection in wildly different ways. When we approach those differences with curiosity instead of disgust or fear, we create safer spaces for honesty. Open-mindedness allows conversations to happen before misunderstandings turn into shame or silence.
You don’t have to like everything you hear — but giving ideas room to be expressed matters.
2. Make Consent Non-Negotiable
Consent isn’t just a checkbox. It’s an ongoing conversation.
Resolving to always seek clear, enthusiastic consent means respecting that people can change their minds, feel unsure, or say no without needing to justify themselves. Consent builds trust, and trust is what makes any relationship — kinky or not — feel safe and mutual.
A good rule for 2026: if it’s not a clear yes, it’s a no — and that’s okay.
3. Try New Things (Thoughtfully)
Growth doesn’t happen in our comfort zones.
Trying something new doesn’t mean pushing past your limits; it means being willing to explore curiosity safely and intentionally. Sometimes you discover something you love. Sometimes you learn something isn’t for you. Both outcomes are valuable.
You can’t know what resonates with you until imagination meets reality — and learning what you don’t like is just as important as learning what you do.
4. Respect Your Boundaries — Without Apology
Your boundaries are not obstacles. They’re information.
One of the most important resolutions you can make is to stop forcing yourself to be comfortable with things that genuinely aren’t right for you. Saying “this isn’t for me” doesn’t make you boring, close-minded, or difficult. It makes you honest.
Respecting your own boundaries teaches others how to respect others, too.
5. Let Go of Resentment
People are allowed to want different things.
In kink, as in life, frustration often comes from unmet expectations. Let 2026 be the year you stop resenting others for liking what you don’t — or for not liking what you do. Difference doesn’t mean rejection; it just means diversity.
The goal isn’t sameness. The goal is understanding.
Here’s to 2026
May this year bring better communication, stronger consent, kinder curiosity, and deeper self-knowledge. May you learn what excites you, what grounds you, and what you can happily leave behind.
Happy New Year — and here’s to growing, exploring, and respecting ourselves and each other.

