As 2025 comes to an end, many young people in Kigali are not talking about dramatic transformations or unrealistic resolutions. Instead, the word on their minds is reset, a quieter, more intentional decision to pause, reflect, and realign their lives for 2026.
Unlike past years where New Year’s goals focused on money, titles, or social pressure, the reset mindset is about well-being, clarity, and sustainable habits. From mental wellness to daily routines, Kigali youth are redefining what it means to start over.
A Mental Reset Comes First
For many, resetting for 2026 begins with the mind. After a year marked by economic pressure, career uncertainty, and constant comparison on social media, young people are paying closer attention to their mental health.
Practices like journaling, mindfulness, and intentional solitude are becoming more common. Some young adults now dedicate 10 to 15 minutes each morning or evening to write down their thoughts, reflect on their emotions, or plan the day ahead.
Others are learning the power of saying no to burnout, to people-pleasing, and to expectations that no longer align with their personal goals. Mental health conversations, once considered private or taboo, are slowly becoming normal among friends, colleagues, and even families.
Resetting Daily Routines, Not Entire Lives
Rather than overhauling their entire lifestyle, many Kigali youth are choosing to reset through small but consistent habits.
Sleep hygiene is one of the most talked-about changes. Young professionals and students are trying to fix irregular sleep patterns caused by late-night scrolling, work stress, or social pressure. Setting phone limits before bedtime, reducing caffeine intake in the evening, and creating simple night routines are part of this reset.
Physical activity is also being redefined. Instead of expensive gym memberships, some prefer morning walks, home workouts, or joining community sports. The goal is no longer an ideal body image, but energy, discipline, and mental clarity.
Digital Detox and Healthier Online Spaces
Social media remains a powerful influence, but 2026 is pushing many young people to rethink how they use it.
A growing number are muting accounts that trigger comparison, limiting screen time, or taking short breaks from certain platforms altogether. The reset is not about disappearing online, but about using social media intentionally for learning, connection, and creativity rather than pressure.
Some are also unfollowing unrealistic success narratives and choosing content that supports personal growth, financial literacy, mental wellness, and skill development.
Financial Resets Without Pressure
Money is a sensitive topic for many young people, especially in an era of rising living costs. Instead of setting unrealistic financial goals, the 2026 reset focuses on financial awareness.
This includes tracking expenses, reducing impulsive spending, and learning basic budgeting skills. For some, resetting financially means paying off small debts. For others, it’s about starting an emergency fund, no matter how small.
The key shift is moving away from comparison and embracing personal financial pace.
Relationships and Boundaries Matter More
Another important part of resetting for the new year is re-evaluating relationships. Young people are becoming more honest about the friendships, romantic connections, and social circles that drain them emotionally.
Setting boundaries with friends, family, or coworkers is no longer seen as selfish but necessary. Many are choosing quality over quantity, deeper conversations over surface-level interactions, and peace over constant availability.
A Reset That Is Personal and Realistic
Perhaps the most powerful lesson Kigali youth are carrying into 2026 is that a reset does not have to look perfect or public. It can be private, gradual, and deeply personal.
Resetting means accepting past mistakes without shame, learning from them, and choosing to move forward with intention. It means understanding that growth is not linear, and that starting over does not erase progress already made.
As 2026 approaches, the reset mindset reminds young people that they don’t need to become someone new, they only need to become more aligned with who they truly are.
Brenna AKARABO
RADIOTV10








