Each January offers more than a fresh calendar — it gives us a quiet invitation to rethink how we move through the world. Not through grand resolutions that fade by February, but through something far more powerful: examining the patterns of thought that shape who we are and how we show up for others. These mental habits — often invisible to us — steer our choices in our families, workplaces, communities and faith spaces. And when we don’t recognize them, they can quietly limit us and unintentionally harm the people around us.

One of the most influential of these patterns is the tension between a scarcity mindset and an abundance mindset. Scarcity thinking pulls our attention toward what is missing — time, resources, recognition, certainty. It is rooted in fear and preoccupied with protecting what little we believe we have. When we operate from scarcity, we default to smallness: we avoid risks, cling to control and assume we must have all the answers. We become guarded with our knowledge, our compassion and even our hope. Scarcity convinces us that life is a zero-sum game, where someone else’s success diminishes our own. At its core, it is the belief that there simply isn’t enough — enough opportunity, enough support, enough room for everyone to thrive.

Once we start paying attention, we can see how scarcity thinking shows up in everyday choices — often in ways we don’t immediately recognize. It can sound noble, responsible or even “practical,” which is why it’s so easy to justify. But beneath the surface, these patterns quietly reinforce fear, competition and self-protection. Consider a few common examples:

  • Prioritizing service to others — especially family — so completely that we neglect our own health, relationships and well‑being. Scarcity convinces us that caring for ourselves somehow takes something away from those we love.
  • Dismissing or doubting women who disclose harassment or violence, searching for reasons to question their motives or credibility. Whether intentional or not, this reflex grows from the belief that acknowledging harm will cost us something: comfort, certainty, loyalty or the illusion that “things like that don’t happen here.”
  • Avoiding opportunities that carry risk, even when they hold the potential for meaningful social impact. Scarcity tells us that unless we can control every outcome, we shouldn’t invest our time, influence or resources.
  • Resisting or undermining resources for groups we don’t belong to simply because the benefits don’t flow directly to us. Even when we don’t need those resources ourselves, scarcity whispers that fairness means “everyone gets the same” — as long as “the same” keeps us at the center.

These patterns are subtle, but their consequences are not. I’ve seen all of these in my work. They shape the culture of our homes, workplaces and communities in ways that limit growth, connection and justice. Scarcity thinking is often fueled by fear — the quiet force that narrows our perspective when we feel threatened by change or uncertainty. Fear makes us less curious and more defensive, pushing us toward quick judgments, rigid thinking and the illusion of control. In that state, we cling to what feels familiar instead of seeking the information that would help us make wiser, more informed choices.

9
Comments

If scarcity narrows our world, an abundance mindset does the opposite — it widens it. Abundance invites us to make decisions from a place of confidence, trust and possibility rather than fear. It is a long‑view way of thinking, one that keeps us open to learning from others, imagining new solutions, embracing calculated risks and creating outcomes where everyone can benefit.

Related
Opinion: Will the ‘Abundance’ agenda change politics?
Perspective: Abundance is all the rage in public policy. Can it work for child care?

I believe that abundance is rooted in generosity: a willingness to share knowledge, connections, resources and compassion because we believe that helping others does not diminish us. In fact, it strengthens the whole. It reflects the simple but transformative idea that when you succeed and I succeed, we all rise together. It is the belief that lifting others does not lower us — and that there is enough room, enough opportunity and enough potential for all of us when we work collectively.

Examples of abundance‑based thinking include:

  • Believing that I can be both a devoted mother and a committed public servant — that my roles can complement rather than compete with one another.
  • Listening respectfully and civilly to perspectives that differ sharply from my own, trusting that understanding another person’s experience expands rather than threatens my own.
  • Sharing information, insights and resources that could strengthen someone else’s workplace, community or family, knowing that collective progress benefits us all.
  • Remaining open to new research, even when the findings challenge what I previously believed. Abundance makes room for growth, complexity and evolving understanding.

We cannot create abundant communities with scarcity‑based habits. But we can choose differently. We can model abundance in our homes, workplaces and civic spaces by sharing information freely, celebrating others’ successes and making decisions that expand opportunity rather than restrict it. When enough of us practice abundance in small, consistent ways, we create the conditions for a more just, generous and hopeful society — one where there truly is room for all of us to rise. Let’s choose abundance in 2026!

Join the Conversation
Looking for comments?
Find comments in their new home! Click the buttons at the top or within the article to view them — or use the button below for quick access.