
Enter bullet journaling. For me, it has become a little life-saver and one of my favorite things to come out of 2017. I still am committed to my iCalendar, and John and I share events and have several calendars each. I've really gotten on board with this during 2017 as well, and it has helped even out some of our scheduling snafus, though they still happen from time to time. As a side note, because of John, I always put the location of whatever event it is into the calendar, and my Apple watch will helpfully remind me when it is time to leave with directions and traffic updates. So wonderful. Helps me to be a little less late. 😜🤷🏻♀️
So, bullet journaling does not replace this digital - it works in beautiful harmony with it. It allows me to get things out of my brain and organize them in a way that is helpful to me. My personality is such that I see endless possibilities and ideas. This is both amazing and overwhelming. When the ideas are free-flowing and not wrangled, I can sometimes feel paralyzed with where to start, because I have only 24 hours a day, just like you. The bullet journal has become the place where I wrangle the ideas and hopes into tangible plans usually assigning them into blocks of time in days or weeks or realizing which things I have to give up.
It is also a mini-creative outlet. I've tried to keep it fairly simple so that I am likely to keep it up, and so far, I have struck a balance with some prettiness that does not take long. I've also figured out what works best for me, but this has been trail and error and will probably continue to evolve the longer I use it.
I took Anne's suggestion and got the Leuchtturm 1917 Hardcover Medium Dotted Journal and LOVE it. I like these pens for basic writing. My favorite find for bullet journaling are the Tombow Dual Brush Pens - I have both the Bright Palette and the Muted Palette. I also bought these stencils. And then I got several sizes of Post-It Notes from Target.
For the monthly layout, I started with what the Bullet Journaling guy suggested and hated it. For me, a list of stuff on numbers did not help me figure out what each week was going to look like.

So, for October, I changed it up to a layout that much better lets me see how each week is shaping up. I've stuck with this and been very pleased.



For the weekly layouts, I've landed on this set up pictured below. It leaves me enough room for a lot of stuff on each day. I did try having each day vertical, but didn't like it as well.




Another helpful feature of my bullet journal are the collections. I have a Book Log which helps me keep track of what I want to read and whether or not I've procured it, and one for the kids (which I need to work on - I have vastly more books that I want to read with them!). I also keep a running list of blog post ideas as they come to me. It is so nice to not feel like I'm losing stuff from my brain. When I very first started, I did a "September Brain Dump" where I wrote out all the tasks that I was contemplating, Being able to see them all helped me to group some together and know when to tackle them and prioritize others or let some of them go forever.
I also keep a page for Cookie Plans where I map out cookie orders that I have coming up.



I knew I wanted a different method of meal planning, so a quick instagram search led to some great options. I mostly copied this one from Sublime Reflections and have been pleased with it. I keep the little post-its with meals that we like stuck in a back page to reuse when they sound good.

So - this may or may not be for you, but I LOVE it for me! I'm thinking of adding a sleep tracker next month to create some better sleep habits for myself and possibly a water tracker cause basically, I suck at drinking water. The possibilities and ways that you can use this are endless. If you look at the #bulletjournal hashtag on Instagram, you will either be super inspired or super overwhelmed.
But - if you think you might want to start - just start. There are much more exhaustive instructions and ideas available online if you want, but ultimately, you really have to just do it to figure it out and figure out what works for you. Don't overthink it - just start writing!
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