Kim Zolciak Biermann is sharing her goals for the new year.
The Real Housewives of Atlanta alum, 45, has a long list of goals she’s aiming for in 2024, and she posted a handful of them on her Instagram Story on Thursday after asking her followers to reveal their own.
Among the goals Zolciak Biermann — who is in the midst of an on-again-off-again divorce with her husband Kroy Biermann — listed were “trusting in the process,” “being more present” and “less worrying.”
She also said she’s going to work at “letting go of things that no longer serve me” as well as “surrounding myself with amazing people who are willing to grow and learn with me.”
The former Bravo star also mentioned “being more open to the possibilities” as one of her goals for 2024.
She added that she has “so many more” aspirations, but would rather “watch them unfold first” instead of sharing them.
Zolciak Biermann also reposted some of the goals for the new year that her followers submitted, and she said that some of the other things she’s hoping to work at in 2024 include getting more organized, staying “consistent” and meditating more — which she said is “tricky” due to her “busy brain.”
It’s been a rocky year for Zolciak Biermann and Biermann, 38, who have filed for divorce (and seemingly called it off) twice. The first divorce filing was dropped in July, but Biermann filed a second time just a month later in August.
While the status of their relationship was unclear throughout the fall — in November, she posted a video of a sing-along car ride with her on-again, off-again husband, and days before that, she reverted back to her married name on Instagram — a court order on Dec. 11 indicated that the divorce is moving forward.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Shermela J. Williams ordered the couple to complete mediation to come to a settlement in their divorce by Jan. 31, 2024, according to a court order obtained by TMZ and Us Weekly.
“As there are numerous unresolved issues, based upon review of the record and applicable authority, the Court finds that the Parties’ interests and the orderly management of the Court’s docket would be served by referring the above-styled case to mediation,” the order reportedly stated. “Both Parties must attend the mediation session.”