Description
Do you choose One Word for your year? If you need help to clarify yours, download this printable workbook to help you choose your One Word for the Year. Created by Idelette McVicker, founder of SheLoves Media Society, this 17-page guide, is a kind and gracious companion.
“A long, long time ago, I was asked a very simple question, What is your One Word for this next year?” That one question revolutionized how I now move through the year. Every year, my One Word guides and compels me, it inspires and challenges me. When I have paid attention, my One Word has changed me and prepared me for my path.
I know it can be daunting to pick only One Word for a whole year. That’s why we created this resource.
With this mini-workbook, I hope to guide you through with some questions, while holding space for you on these pages, so your One Word may come to you too.
Here are a few of the ideas we cover:
- What is the One Word Practice?
- Myths Around Choosing One Word
- What it’s Meant to Do and What it Won’t Do
- Resistance
- Clarifying.
If you are ready to choose your One Word this year, purchase it now.
COST: $9.99
(The One Word mini-workbook is a resource available for free when you join Dangerous Women.)

If you only know one thing about me, I’d love for you to know this: I love Jesus, justice and living juicy.
I also happen to drive a minivan and drink my lattes plain. (My life is exciting enough!)
Nineteen years ago, I moved from Taiwan to Canada to marry Scott. We have two teenagers, a preteen, a Bernese Mountain dog and a restaurant. (Ask Scott to tell you our love story.)
In 2010, I founded SheLovesmagazine.com and it has now grown to include a Dangerous Women membership community, a Red Couch Bookclub, events and gatherings. I’d like to think of it as curating transformational spaces for women in community. I long for women to be strong in our faith and voice, so we can be advocates for God’s heart for justice here on earth.
As an Afrikaner woman, born and raised in South Africa during Apartheid, my story humbly compels me to step out for justice and everyday peacemaking. I have also seen firsthand the impact injustice has had on the lives and stories of women around the world. I refuse to stay silent.
I am anti-racist and also a recovering racist. I am a Seven on the Enneagram, an INFP and I mostly wear black, with a dash of animal print or faux fur.
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