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Full text of "The Bullet Journal Method Track The Past, Order The
Present, Design The Future
"
See other formats
THE
BULLET JOURNAL
METHOD
€ € €
TRACK YOUR PAST,
ORDER YOUR PRESENT,
PLAN YOUR FUTURE
€
RYDER CARROLL
Creator of the Bullet Journal®
THE
BULLET JOURNAL
METHOD
q C q
TRACK YOUR PAST,
ORDER YOUR PRESENT,
PLAN YOUR FUTURE
i (
RYDER CARROLL
Creator of the Bullet Journal?
( €
PRAISE FOR THE BULLET JOURNAL METHOD
“Bullet journaling is one of the most elegant and effective productivity systems I've ever
encountered. It will not only help you get more organized but will also help you become a
better person. I highly recommend this book (and the method it details) for anyone looking
to get more out of life."
—Cal Newport, author of Deep Work
^Whether you are an avid journaler or have always wanted to explore the benefits of
journaling, The Bullet Journal Method simplifies the power of putting pen to paper and will
undoubtedly transform your life, in more ways than you can imagine."
—Hal Elrod, author of The Miracle Morning
"Ryder has done an extraordinary job in sharing a comprehensive and hands-on
methodology to implement the powerful practice of externalizing our thinking— no matter
what it's about! It's a great treatise and manual for freeing and directing our consciousness,
with lots of tips about how to play in that big and wonderful game."
— David Allen, author of Getting Things Done
THE
BULLET: JOURNAL
METHOD
TRACK THE PAST,
ORDER THE PRESENT,
DESIGN THE FUTURE
RYDER CARROLL
4th Estate
An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
www.4thEstate.co.uk
This eBook first published in Great Britain by 4th Estate in 2018
First published in the United States by Portfolio/Penguin, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC in 2018
Copyright © 2018 by Ryder Carroll
Ryder Carroll asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
Original artwork throughout this book courtesy of Dee Martinez, Eddy Hope, and Kim Alvarez.
Book design by Meighan Cavanaugh
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
While the author has made every effort to provide accurate telephone numbers, Internet addresses, and other
contact information at the time of publication, neither the publisher nor the author assumes any responsibility for
errors, or for changes that occur after publication. Further, the publisher does not have any control over and does
not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required
fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-
screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or
stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether
electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of
HarperCollins
Source ISBN: 9780008261375
Ebook Edition © September 2019 ISBN: 9780008261382
Version: 2018-10-18
TO MY PARENTS FOR JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING
TO THE BULLET JOURNAL COMMUNITY FOR DARING
THANK YOU,
RYDER
INDEX
Introduction
The Promise
The Guide
The Why
Decluttering Your Mind
Notebooks
Handwriting
Rapid Logging
Topics and Pagination
Bullets
Tasks
Events
Notes
Signifiers and Custom Bullets
Collections
The Daily Log
The Monthly Log
The Future Log
The Index
Migration
The Letter
Set up
Reflection
Meaning
Goals
Small Steps
Time
Gratitude
Control
Radiance
Endurance
Deconstruction
Inertia
Imperfection
Custom Collections
Design
Planning
Lists
Schedules
Trackers
Customization
Community
The Correct Way to Bullet Journal
Parting_Words
Frequently Asked Questions
Thank You
Notes
Content
About the Author
T.O.C. vs. Index: In the Bullet Journal we combine the table of
contents and a traditional index to keep the content in your notebook
organized and easily accessible. You can read more about this on
this page .
Let us postpone nothing. Let us balance life's account every day. ...
One who daily puts the finishing touches to his life is never in want
of time.
—SENECA , Moral Letters to Lucilius
THE PREPARATION
what
why
INTRODUCTION
T he mystery box arrived unannounced. Stranger still, there was
my mother's unmistakable block script adorning the address
label. Maybe a surprise gift, for no particular occasion or reason?
Unlikely.
Opening the box revealed a mess of old notebooks. Perplexed, I
fished out a nuclear orange one covered in graffiti. Its pages
brimmed with rough illustrations of robots, monsters, battle scenes,
and wildly misspelled words. Different kinds of ... a chill went
down my spine. These were mine!
I took a deep breath and dove in. This was more than a trip down
memory lane. It was like reentering the husk of an all-but-forgotten
self. As I leafed through another notebook, a folded sheet fell from
its pages. Curious, I unfolded it to find a grotesque rendering of a
very angry man. He was yelling so hard that his eyes bulged and his
tongue flapped out of his mouth. Two words were written on the
page. One small word, shyly tucked into a corner, revealed the
identity of the apoplectic man: an old teacher of mine. The other
large jagged word, the one revealing the target of his rage, was my
name.
My problems started early in elementary school with the terrible
grades, the red-faced teachers, the resigned tutors. My performance
was so alarming that I spent a good amount of my summers in
special schools and psychologists' offices. Eventually I was
diagnosed with attention deficit disorder (ADD). This was back in
the 1980s, when mullets were better understood than my condition.
The few resources that were available were either too complicated
or proscriptive to prove helpful, or didn't fit my needs. If anything,
they salted the wound. Nothing worked the way that my mind
worked, so I was left largely to my own dull devices.
The main culprit was my inability to rein in my focus. It wasn't
that I couldn't focus; I just had a hard time concentrating on the
right thing at the right time, on being present. My attention would
always dart off to the next bright thing. As I cycled through
distractions, my responsibilities steadily piled up until they became
overwhelming. I often found myself coming up short or trailing
behind. Facing those feelings day in, day out led to deep self-doubt.
Few things are more distracting than the cruel stories we tell
ourselves.
I admired my successful peers, with their unwavering attention
and their notebooks brimming with detailed notes. I became
fascinated with order and discipline, qualities that to me seemed as
beautiful as they did foreign. To unravel these mysteries, I started
devising organizational tricks designed to embrace the way my mind
worked.
Through trial and a lot of error, I gradually pieced together a
system that worked, all in my good old-fashioned paper notebook. It
was a cross between a planner, diary, notebook, to-do list, and
sketchbook. It provided me with a practical yet forgiving tool to
organize my impatient mind. Gradually, I became less distracted,
less overwhelmed, and a lot more productive. I realized that it was
up to me to solve my challenges. More importantly, I realized that I
could!
By 2007, I was working as a web designer for a big fashion label
headquartered in the neon heart of New York City, Times Square.
I'd gotten the job through a friend who worked there and was
struggling to plan her upcoming wedding. Her desk was littered with
notebooks, Post-its, and scraps of paper a couple of inches deep. It
looked like one of those manic conspiracy map rooms you see in
crime shows.
I'd been looking for a way to repay her for getting me the
position. So one day, as I saw her scrounging for yet another
wayward note, I awkwardly offered to show her how I used my
notebook. She turned to me with raised eyebrows, and to my
surprise—and horror—she took me up on the offer. Gulp. What had
I gotten myself into? Sharing my notebook was like offering
someone an unadulterated look into my mind, which, well . . . yeah.
A few days later we went for coffee. My clumsy tutorial took a
while. I felt deeply vulnerable exposing how I organized my
thoughts—the symbols, the systems, the templates, the cycles, the
lists. To me, these were the many crutches invented to support a
faulty brain. I avoided making eye contact until I was finished.
Mortified, I looked up. Her gaping mouth instantly validated all my
insecurities. After an excruciating pause she said, “You have to
share this with people."
After the awkwardness of that tutorial, it took a lot more
prodding for me to share my system. But over the years, I found
myself fielding shy questions from designers, developers, project
managers, and accountants about my ever-present notebook. Some
asked about organizing their day-to-day. So I showed them how to
use my system for quickly logging their tasks, events, and notes.
Others asked about setting goals. So I demonstrated how they could
use my system for structuring action plans to tackle future aims.
Others just wanted to be less scattered, so I showed them how to
neatly funnel all their notes and projects into one notebook.
It had never occurred to me that these solutions I'd devised could
be so widely applicable. If someone had a specific need, it was easy
to modify one of my techniques to support it. I started to wonder
whether sharing my solutions to common organizational challenges
might help others avoid, or at least mitigate, the frustration I had
endured earlier in my life.
All well and good, but if I was going to open my mouth again,
there would be no more awkward freestyling. I formalized the
system and streamlined it, stripping away everything but the most
effective techniques I had developed over the years. Nothing exactly
like it existed, so I had to invent a new language with its own
vocabulary. This made the system significantly easier to explain—
and, I hoped, to learn. Now it needed a name, something that spoke
to its speed, its efficiency, its heritage, and its purpose. I called it the
Bullet Journal.
Next, I launched a website featuring interactive tutorials and
videos that walked users through the newly minted Bullet Journal
system, aka BuJo. I smiled when the site passed 100 unique visitors.
To me, that was mission accomplished! Then the unexpected
happened. Bulletjournal.com was featured on Lifehack.org. Then on
Lifehacker.com, then in Fast Company , and from there it went
viral. The site went from 100 to 100,000 unique visitors in days .
Bullet Journal communities sprouted up across the web. To my
astonishment, people were openly sharing their approaches to
dealing with deeply personal challenges. Veterans shared their
tactics for coping with PTSD by tracking their days in their Bullet
Journals. People suffering from OCD shared ways to distance
themselves from their overpowering thoughts. I was touched
hearing from those like myself suffering from ADD as they shared
how their grades improved and their anxiety diminished. In the
often toxic world of online communities, these Bullet Journal
groups created incredibly positive and supportive spaces, each
focusing on different challenges, all using the same tool.
Sandy stumbled upon Bullet Journaling in May 2017, through a
video on Facebook. Lack of sleep and caring for a toddler left her
extremely disorganized and forgetful, which is not how anyone
would normally describe her. Thoughts ran through her mind like
squirrels: Had he slept long enough? Were his immunizations on
track? When was that preschool application deadline again? As soon
as she put one task to rest, another popped up in its place. She felt
stressed and demoralized. Did other moms know something she
didn't? So when she heard about an organizational system requiring
just a notebook and a pen, she felt she had nothing to lose.
The first step was to create a log of everything she had to do that
month. She wrote each family member's schedule in separate
columns. They all worked irregular hours. It felt like she could
finally press pause on the roller coaster for long enough to see who
would be where for the next four weeks. It was horrifying to think
about how easily one of them could forget to pick up their baby
from preschool in a few years. It felt like it was just a matter of time
before they would forget something important.
Sandy resolutely drew another column. She wrote down events
and birthdays so they were easily visible. On her monthly financial
log, she listed when bills were due and how much she'd paid. She
also added daily boxes to track habits and goals—or just a reminder
to stop and breathe!
Writing by hand was strangely soothing. Sandy didn't want to set
her hopes too high, though, when so many other systems had
promised to get the organized side of herself back without
delivering long-term change.
Sandy moved on to the next part of the instructions. They were
intended to help her keep sight of the bigger picture. What were her
aspirations for the coming year? On her Yearly Goals page, she
dared to write down a passion project that she'd been weakly
attempting for years—with no progress to show for it. Was her OCD
sabotaging her resolution to spend more time lettering and
drawing? Or was she just too busy? All she knew was that she had
potential she wasn't using.
Over the coming weeks, Sandy's habit of sitting down with her
Bullet Journal became as effortless as brushing her teeth. Silly as it
seemed, crossing off little boxes kept her motivated by reminding
her that there was a finite number of tasks to do every day. She
didn't forget about a single bill. Nor did she have to send any long,
apologetic texts for forgetting someone's birthday. Another
surprising thing was that the layout of the Bullet Journal reminded
her that mundane tasks were part of the bigger picture. The
Monthly Goals and Yearly Goals pages showed her every day that
she had a long game, and that she was on her way. Her trick was to
add a tiny passion project—say, 15 minutes of lettering by hand—to
every Daily Log, and to do it first thing every day. She always had 15
free minutes if she took them before checking her phone. It was like
time had expanded.
Soon Sandy noticed that journaling garnered more benefits than
just keeping her organized and sane. All her life, she'd suffered from
a condition called dermatillomania, also known as compulsive skin-
picking disorder, that she'd been ashamed of her whole life. For
Sandy, it was mostly concentrated on her fingers. She'd canceled
meetings and interviews because she felt her fingers looked
horrible. Sometimes she couldn't sleep because of the pain, and
she'd constantly dropped things and was unable to do the simplest
of tasks. For example, she'd always asked her husband or her mom
to help her squeeze some lemon for her tea to avoid the biting pain
of the acidic sting.
After Bullet Journaling for a few months, she found herself in
the kitchen, tears welling up in her eyes. She looked down at her
hands, finally squeezing a lemon, and realized that her fingers were
no longer covered with wounds. With every line, letter, and notation
she made, she'd kept her hands busy and let them slowly but surely
heal. I’ve included the special page she designed in her journal to
commemorate the day.
Not only did Bullet Journaling help her plan, track, and keep
memories; it let her be creative, heal and no longer hide, and be a
part of an encouraging, supportive community. She is not alone in
this. I've also been inspired by the inventive, resilient, and spirited
Bullet Journalists who have taken my methodology and customized
it to fit their circumstances. This is in part why I decided to write
this book.
Whether you're an experienced Bullet Journalist or a newcomer,
The Bullet Journal Method is for anyone struggling to find their
place in the digital age. It will help you get organized by providing
simple tools and techniques that can inject clarity, direction, and
focus into your days. As great as getting organized feels, however,
it's just the surface of something significantly deeper and more
valuable.
I had always thought my ADD made me different from others.
One thing this community helped me realize is that my condition
simply forced me to address something early on that has since
become a common malady of the digital age: the lack of self-
awareness.
In the most connected time in history, we're quickly losing touch
with ourselves. Overwhelmed by a never-ending flood of
information, we're left feeling overstimulated yet restless,
overworked yet discontented, tuned in yet burned out. As
technology leaked into every nook in my life, with its countless
distractions, my methodology provided an analog refuge that proved
invaluable in helping me define and focus on what truly mattered.
Now countless others have found it key in helping them reclaim
agency over their lives.
In 2015, Anthony Gorrity, a shy designer, quit an unsatisfying
agency job and started freelancing. He'd been dreaming of going out
on his own for years. What he didn't anticipate was the added
pressure to perform and the need to structure his own time. He
tried a few apps to keep himself organized, but none were as flexible
as he needed. He took to keeping notebooks of to-do lists, but they
were a mess. Clients would call him without warning, and he'd rifle
through six different notebooks trying to find the notes he needed.
He knew he'd written this down ... somewhere... . All of these
frantic moments undercut his confidence. As someone who wasn't a
natural self-promoter, he had a hard enough time pitching himself
to get work—and now it seemed as if once the work came in, a
whole new set of stressful challenges awaited. He wondered if he'd
made a mistake by going freelance. Then he had a distant memory
of seeing a video of some guy demoing some super-complex journal
system that he swore by. He started Googling all kinds of weird
keywords until he eventually found BulletJournal.com. The system
wasn't nearly as complex as he'd remembered. He grabbed a fresh
notebook and started consolidating everything he needed to do.
A few things changed. He became a lot more introspective. He
realized that he loved making to-do lists, and he loved knocking out
tasks even more. Best of all, self-confidence had room to take root
in the clean, clear space of his notebook: Having things written
down gave him the guts he needed when on the phone with a client.
Being prepared, and knowing his material, made him feel less like a
salesman and more like a craftsman. The Bullet Journal provided a
framework that allowed Anthony to explore his potential.
This is a critical aspect of the methodology; it helps us cultivate a
better sense of ourselves both in and out of the professional theater.
The simple act of pausing to write down the important minutia of
one's life goes far beyond simple organization. It has helped people
reconnect with themselves and the things they care about.
I spend much of my time nowadays connecting with fellow Bullet
Journalists like Sandy and Anthony and fielding questions from the
community. Many seek to expand the functionality of their Bullet
Journals. Others delve deeper, tackling universal challenges that
have become amplified in today's frenetic world. In this book, I seek
to address those questions and demonstrate how a simple notebook
can prove invaluable in uncovering the answers.
The Bullet Journal method consists of two parts: the system and
the practice. First we'll learn about the system, to teach you how to
transform your notebook into a powerful organizational tool. Then
we'll examine the practice. It's a fusion of philosophies from a
variety of traditions that define how to live an intentional life—a life
both productive and purposeful. The result of my endeavor to
translate this timeless knowledge into focused action resulted in the
Bullet Journal method, the analog system for the digital age. It will
help you track the past and order the present so that you can design
your future. I originally developed it as a way to overcome my
organizational challenges. Over the years, though, it's matured into
a personal operating system that has profoundly changed my life for
the better. My hope is that it can do the same for you.
THE PROMISE
Life had gotten too busy. It seemed as if my existence had become just one long to-do list. I
had forgotten about my dreams, my goals, my what-ifs, my “what if I could's."
—AMY HAINES
T he Bullet Journal method’s mission is to help us become
mindful about how we spend our two most valuable resources in
life: our time and our energy. If you’re going to invest both reading
this book, it's only fair to start by highlighting what's in it for you.
To sum it up:
The Bullet Journal method will help you accomplish
more by working on less. It helps you identify and
focus on what is meaningful by stripping away what
is meaningless.
How does it do this? By weaving together productivity,
mindfulness, and intentionality into a framework that is flexible,
forgiving, and, most importantly, practical. Let's take a closer look at
each.
INTENTIONALITY
PRODUCTIVITY
Productivity
Do you ever feel overwhelmed by all your responsibilities?
Sometimes life feels like a hellish game of whack-a-mole,
condemned to stomping out never-ending chores, meetings, emails,
and texts. Your multitasking madness has you squeezing in
workouts by pacing across your apartment while FaceTiming your
sister—who is asking if you could breathe less heavily. Nothing is
getting the attention it deserves, and it doesn’t feel good. You hate
disappointing other people as much as you hate disappointing
yourself. To get more done, you’ve even hacked your sleep, whittling
it down to the bare minimum—except now you're a zombie
because ... you've hacked your sleep down to the bare minimum.
Let's step back. Every year between 1950 and 2000, Americans
increased their productivity about 1 to 4 percent. + Since 2005,
however, this growth has slowed in advanced economies, with a
productivity decrease recorded in the United States in 2016. ? Maybe
our rapidly evolving technology that promises us near-limitless
options to keep us busy is not, in fact, making us more productive?
One possible explanation for our productivity slowdown is that
we're paralyzed by information overload. As Daniel Levitin writes in
The Organized Mind , information overload is worse for our focus
than exhaustion or smoking marijuana. ?
It stands to reason, then, that to be more productive we need a
way to stem the tide of digital distractions. Enter the Bullet Journal,
an analog solution that provides the offline space needed to process,
to think, and to focus. When you open your notebook, you
automatically unplug. It momentarily pauses the influx of
information so your mind can catch up. Things become less of a
blur, and you can finally examine your life with greater clarity.
The Bullet Journal will help you declutter your
packed mind so you can finally examine your
thoughts from an objective distance.
We often cobble together ways to organize ourselves on the fly. A
little of this app; a little of that calendar. Over time, this results in
an unwieldy productivity Frankenstein of Post-its, various apps, and
email. It kinda works, but it also feels like it’s coming apart at the
seams. You waste time deliberating where information should go
and trying to locate it later: Did you write something down in your
notes app or on a Post-it? And where did that Post-it go, anyway?
Many a great idea, "keeper" thought, or important “note to self”
has fallen victim to a misplaced scrap of paper or an outdated app.
It's a compounding inefficiency that drains your bandwidth, but it's
completely avoidable. The Bullet Journal is designed to be your
"source of truth." No, this is not some dubious invitation to worship
this methodology. It means that you no longer have to wonder
where your thoughts live.
Once you've learned how to keep your thoughts in one place,
we'll examine how to prioritize them effectively. Everyone calling,
emailing, or texting you wants your answer right away. Rather than
being proactive about setting priorities, a lot of us simply let the
flood of external demands set them for us. Distracted and
overextended, our opportunities go under. There goes your chance
to increase your GPA, to get that promotion, to run that marathon,
to read a book every two weeks.
BuJo puts you at the helm. You'll learn how to stop
reacting and start responding.
You'll learn how to tackle difficult challenges and turn your
vague curiosities into meaningful goals, how to break your goals
into smaller, more manageable Sprints, and then finally how to
effectively take action. What's the next step to improving your GPA
this semester? Acing all your classes? No. Get more granular. In
which class are you falling behind? What's the next assignment in
that class? Writing a paper. Okay, what book do you need to read
before writing that paper? Getting that book from the library—that's
the most important thing you have to do now . What about doing
the extra-credit assignment for the class you're already acing?
Waste of time.
In this book, we will introduce scientifically proven techniques
that turn any notebook into a powerful tool for surfacing
opportunities and weeding out distractions so that you can focus
your time and energy on what actually matters.
Mindfulness
Uh-oh, the “M” word. Don't worry, no sitars required. When we talk
about mindfulness, we're typically talking about a heightened
awareness of the present. Productivity is all fine and good, but BuJo
isn't designed to help you spin faster on the hamster wheel.
We live in an age where technology promises us near-limitless
options to occupy ourselves, yet we're left feeling more distracted
and disconnected than ever before. Like when flying, we watch the
world speed by at 600 miles an hour with no idea where we truly
are. If we're lucky, we may glimpse some ocean glinting below or
lightning ripping through dark distant clouds. For the most part,
though, we're semiconscious passengers, killing time before the
unnerving descent.
If the journey is the destination, then we must learn how to
become better travelers. To become better travelers, we must first
learn to orient ourselves. Where are you now? Do you want to be
here? If not, why do you want to move on?
Knowing where you are begins with knowing who
you are.
Mindfulness is the process of waking up to see what's right in
front of us. It helps you become more aware of where you are, who
you are, and what you want. This is where BuJo comes into play.
The act of writing by hand draws our mind into the present moment
on a neurological level unlike any other capturing mechanism. * It is
in the present moment that we begin to know ourselves. Joan
Didion, a famous proponent of writing things down, began doing so
at age five. She believed that notebooks were one of the best
antidotes for a distracted world: ^We forget all too soon the things
we thought we could never forget. We forget the loves and the
betrayals alike, forget what we whispered and what we screamed,
forget who we were. ... It is a good idea, then, to keep in touch, and
I suppose that keeping in touch is what notebooks are all about. And
we are all on our own when it comes to keeping those lines open to
ourselves: your notebook will never help me, nor mine you." 5
For you digital natives out there, fear not. Banish the image of
some hunched, squint-eyed Dickensian figure endlessly scrawling
away in a garret by failing candlelight. No, here you'll learn how to
capture thoughts quickly and effectively. You'll learn how to journal
at the speed of life.
This is where BuJo comes into play. We'll explore various
techniques that help us form the habit of asking these kinds of
questions, so we stop getting lost in the daily grind. In other words,
the Bullet Journal method keeps us mindful of why we're doing
what we're doing.
Intentionality
Think back to a book, a speech, or a quotation that deeply touched
you or changed the way you thought about life. It was wisdom that
inspired you, that held so much promise. All you had to do was act
on this newfound knowledge and things would get easier, better,
clearer, more empowering.
Now, how much of this knowledge is still in play—not just
intellectually, but practically? Did you become a better person,
friend, or mate? Did you keep the weight off? Are you happier?
Chances are what you learned has withered, if it survived at all. It's
not that it wasn't helpful. It just didn't stick. Why is that?
The rush of our busy lives can quietly carve out a gulf separating
our actions from our beliefs. We tend to follow the path of least
resistance, even when it leads away from the things we care about.
It can require a lot of ongoing effort to effect the change we seek. As
any athlete will tell you, you need to tear muscle to build it, over
and over again. Like building muscle, we need to train our
intentions to make them resilient and strong.
Whereas it's easy to "forget" to meditate or summon excuses to
skip yoga, there are serious and immediate repercussions when we
ignore our day-to-day obligations. To successfully introduce a new
sustainable routine, it needs to fit into your packed schedule. What
if you had a way that championed your intentions and kept you
more organized throughout your day?
The Bullet Journal method acts as a bridge between
your beliefs and your actions by integrating into the
nitty-gritty of your life.
In addition to organizing her obligations, Amy Haines used her
Bullet Journal to keep track of ideas for her business, people she
wanted to learn from, apps to check out, even new teas to try. She
customized her Collections—which you'll read about later—to cut
through the sinking feeling of endless to-do lists and to stay in
touch with what she really wanted to do. She was able to reclaim the
things that mattered and had gotten away.
Through Bullet Journaling, you'll automatically form a regular
habit of introspection where you'll begin to define what's important,
why it's important, and then figure out how to best pursue those
things. You're gently reminded of these insights every day, which
makes it easier to put them into action wherever you happen to be,
be it a boardroom, classroom, or even emergency room.
Bullet Journalists have been hired for dream jobs, started
businesses, ended toxic relationships, relocated, or, in some cases,
simply become more content with who they are by making BuJo
part of their routine. This methodology is powered by wisdom from
traditions around the world. Like a reverse prism, Bullet Journal
absorbs these traditions and focuses them into one bright beam that
will help you clearly see where you are and illuminate the way
forward. It will empower you to go from passenger to pilot through
the art of intentional living.
THE GUIDE
B ullet Journaling is not a fair-weather friend. It has dutifully
suffered and celebrated alongside me through all the different
seasons of my life. It has served the many masters of my former
selves: the student, the intern, the heartbroken, the designer, and
more. It always welcomes me without judgment or expectation.
When setting out to write this book, I wanted to create something
that could serve you the same way. This book is designed as your
Bullet Journal base camp. It's here to prepare you for your first
ascent and to welcome you back when you need to rest, restock, and
recalibrate.
GEAR
NOTE Book PEN PAPER
For Those Just Getting Started
If this is your first experience with the Bullet Journal, welcome!
Thank you kindly for spending your time here. To get the most from
this book, I encourage you to follow the linear path, beginning to
end. This path is designed to be participatory. We'll leverage the
power of transcription (this page ) to help you imprint the system
faster into your mind. All you'll need is a blank sheet of paper, an
empty notebook, and something to write with.
The Bullet Journal method is comprised of two main
components: the system and the practice. Part II of this book will
focus on the system. You'll learn the names of the ingredients and
how they're used. Like in a kitchen, Parts I and II will help you
become a skilled line cook. Parts III and IV are where we delve into
the practice. There you'll learn how to become a chef. We'll explore
the sources and science behind these ingredients so that you can
customize the Bullet Journal to suit your needs.
For Seasoned Bullet Journalists—and Anyone in
Between
The chapters are designed as independent Collections (this page ),
mimicking the structure of the Bullet Journal system. As long as
you're comfortable with the BuJo vocabulary, you should be able to
open the book to any chapter that grabs your attention. If you're
not, then check out Part II!
Part II delves into the system that you know and love in great
detail. We take a closer look at each core Collection and technique,
revealing both the reasoning and history behind their design. Then,
in Part IV, we apply all of these concepts to a mock project. Here
you'll learn how to extend and further customize the system.
The system, however, is only one part of what makes up the
Bullet Journal method.
The first parts of this book are about how to Bullet
Journal. The latter parts are about why to Bullet
Journal.
If you've been Bullet Journaling for a while, you may have felt
there's more to it than just keeping your lists organized. You may
feel that it’s made you more grounded, confident, focused, calmer,
even inspired. That's because the Bullet Journal is powered by
various sciences and philosophies to help us live with more
intention. In this book, I'll pull back the curtain to reveal why the
Bullet Journal has the effect that it does. This deeper context will
not only validate what you're already doing, but can take your BuJo
practice to a whole new level.
Whatever level you're at, from BuJo newbie to pro, this book is a
look into the heart of Bullet Journaling, where mindfulness meets
productivity to help you design a life you want to live.
THE WHY
Intentional living is the art of making our own choices before others' choices make us.
—RICHIE NORTON
M y first start-up, Paintapic, was born in a closet filled with
thousands of thimble-size pots of paint. The service allowed
you to turn your photos into a custom paint-by-number kit,
complete with a canvas, paints, and brushes. At the time, I also had
a demanding full-time day job, so Paintapic was built entirely on
nights and weekends.
Leadership had changed at my nine-to-five, and the new direction
had pulled the plug on the creative projects that allowed me to enjoy
my job. Over time, this new vision became so limiting that I no
longer felt I was adding real value to the company. My potential
impact on Paintapic, however, was limited only by the amount of
time I was willing to invest. So I Old Yellered my social life for
Paintapic's sake and got to work.
My cofounder had convinced his employer to rent us an unused
storage closet ... as our office. That dark room with its one small
frosted window devoured our nights and weekends for nearly two
years. Thousands of decisions were made in that cramped
Cyclopean skull of a room. We poured ourselves into every single
detail —down to the number of bristles on our brushes.
Finally, the moment we had been waiting for arrived: launch day.
Orders went out. Money came in. We were in the black. We were
doing pretty well right out of the gate without any outside
investment. That's rare for a start-up. We were by all accounts a
(humble) success.
As soon as our site launched, I placed an order through our site. I
remember how excited I was to receive my kit in the mail. Here it
was, real and working! But by the time I had walked up the single
flight of stairs to my flat, I was already preoccupied with something
else. To this day, that kit remains unopened somewhere, a goofy
portrait of a pug (our unofficial mascot) forever waiting to be
painted.
My indifference quickly stained every aspect of running the
company. Deep confusion and frustration set in. On paper, I had
accomplished everything I was told would make me happy. I
sacrificed a lot getting to this point, but now that I was here, it just
didn't seem to matter. I wasn't alone. My partner seemed to share
these feelings. The process of creating the company, the pleasure we
got out of building, had blinded us to a simple truth: We were just
not paint-by-number guys. Though the product added value to the
lives of our customers, it added little to ours. We weren't passionate
about the product—we’d just fallen in love with the entrepreneurial
challenge.
How often do we find ourselves in this position? You've worked
incredibly hard on something, only to discover that it leaves you
feeling empty. You compensate by working even harder. You reason
that maybe if you put in more hours, you'll finally be able to
appreciate the fruits of your labor. Why does this happen?
What is your true motivation for lifting that weight, being on that
diet, working so late? Are you trying to lose ten pounds for health
reasons, or are you in a toxic relationship that's stripping you of
your confidence? Maybe you don't realize that you're killing
yourself at work just to put off having a hard conversation with your
spouse. If that's the case, no matter how much time you clock at the
office, it won't offer lasting relief, because you're climbing the
wrong mountain. We need to understand what's actually driving our
motivation before we ascend.
Our motivations are heavily informed by the media. Our social
feeds are populated by endless images of wealth, travel, power,
relaxation, beauty, pleasure, and Hollywood love. This virtual runoff
perpetually seeps into our consciousness, polluting our sense of
reality and self-worth every time we go online. We compare our
lives to these largely artificial constructs and structure our plans
accordingly, hoping to eventually afford a golden ticket to these
misleading fantasies. Conveniently tucked out of sight are the
months of planning, the “talent” lined up in audition studios toting
their head shots, the production crews, the double-parked trucks
filled with camera gear, the long spells of unemployment, the weeks
of rain that stopped shooting, the food poisoning on location, the
empty sets after they leave. Distracted by the never-ending stream
of aspirational media, we forfeit our opportunity to define what is
meaningful on our own terms.
Bronnie Ware, an Australian nurse and author who spent several
years working in palliative care with patients in the last weeks of
their lives, recorded her patients' top five regrets. The number one
regret was that people wished they had stayed true to themselves.
When people realize that their life is almost over and look back
clearly on it, it is easy to see how many dreams have gone
unfulfilled. Most people had not honoured even a half of their
dreams and had to die knowing that it was due to choices they had
made, or not made. £
Choices come in all flavors: the good, the bad, the big, the small,
the happy, and the hard choices to name but a few. We can make
these choices carelessly, or we can make them with intention. But
what does that mean? What does it mean to live an intentional life?
The philosopher David Bentley Hart defines intentionality as “the
fundamental power of the mind to direct itself toward something...
a specific object, purpose, or end.” ? The term hails from medieval
scholastic philosophy, so I'd like to adapt and update it a bit for our
purposes: Intentionality is the power of the mind to direct itself
toward that which it finds meaningful and take action toward that
end.
If intentionality means acting according to your
beliefs, then the opposite would be operating on
autopilot. In other words, do you know why you're
doing what you're doing?
We can't be true to ourselves if we don't know what we want, and
more importantly why , so that's where we must begin. It's a
process that requires the steady cultivation of our self-awareness.
This may seem very woo-woo, but it can be as simple as paying
attention to what resonates with us, what sparks our interest—and,
just as importantly, what does not. As we begin to identify the
things we're drawn to, we can start properly defining our dreams,
based on what we actually believe in.
When we believe in what we're doing, we stop mindlessly
clocking in. We become more innovative, creative, and present.
We're not only working harder, but smarter because both our hearts
and minds are genuinely engaged by the endeavor.
Cultivating this self-awareness is a lifelong process, but it starts
by simply checking in with yourself. That's where the Bullet Journal
method comes in. You can view your Bullet Journal as a living
autobiography. It allows you to clearly see what the rush of life
tends to obscure. You can track the decisions you've made, and the
actions you've taken that led you to where you are. It encourages
you to learn from your experiences. What worked, what did not,
how did it make you feel, what's the next move? Day by day, you're
deepening your self-awareness by becoming a steady witness to
your story. With each page, you improve your ability to discern the
meaningful from the meaningless. If you don't like how life is
unfolding, you'll have developed the skill and determination
required to change the narrative, as Rachael M. and her husband
did:
| work full time as a graphic designer, run my own freelance business, and serve
several days a week as a youth leader, all while helping my husband with his
ministry. My husband and | met two years ago. We love being married, but almost
from day one, there were so many needs and things to remember and events to
schedule—we were both going crazy.
My husband and | were struggling to communicate and keep up-to-date with each
other's schedule. | went to work, bought groceries on the way home, made food,
cleaned house, and tried to remember everything else I had to get done. By then it
was time for bed, and the next day we started all over again. In addition to all this,
we learned that | had a thyroid condition, as well as gluten and lactose sensitivities.
Now food prep was even harder. | was completely overwhelmed.
We also struggled to spend quality time together. That's obviously something
that everyone knows is crucial to a happy, healthy marriage. However, since my
husband is a pastor, a big part of his workweek happens on evenings and
weekends and he takes time off during the typical workweek. | work a traditional
nine-to-five Monday through Friday. It was extremely difficult to figure out how to
carve out time together. I’m the extrovert of the relationship and | ended up feeling
lonely a lot of the time because of how much his work needed him during my
weekends.
We knew we had to do something, so we started scheduling everything in our
Bullet Journals. We used the Weekly and Monthly Logs to get ahead of our
schedule and figure out what was coming. This gave us a visual cue for how busy
we were going to be and helped us know ahead of time when we probably needed
to block off some time for just the two of us. It also helped me figure out that the
key to feeling like | had enough time with him was having Saturdays together so we
actually adjusted our schedules to ensure that both of us are protecting as many
Saturdays as possible to spend time together.
Bullet Journaling helped us refocus on our personal goals as well. My husband
and I were both single and established in careers we loved for some time before we
got together. Both of us loving what we did meant we were used to giving our jobs
a huge chunk of our attention, and that was important to us. We had to learn how to
prioritize our marriage instead of just our work. We could have used digital
calendars to sync up, but the discipline of analog and the experience of sitting
down with our Bullet Journals to physically mark in events helped us have the
conversations we needed to have and to look further ahead so we weren't always
blindsided by the next thing. It also helped us express concerns if we were starting
to schedule too many things outside the home and made us feel like a unit, planning
our life together, instead of trying to slam two busy calendars together. Now, we
love our marriage and our jobs and want to help one another succeed
professionally.
Now, almost eight months later, we are accomplishing more than ever in every
area of our lives, all before 8:00 p.m. each night! Thanks to Bullet Journaling, | have
a handle on my life. | know what's coming. I have built in moments to reflect and
make sure I’m actually focusing on the right things. And I have new confidence in
my marriage and ministry because | know my husband and | are on the same page
and are working toward defined goals that we share—we've written them right in
the front of our journals.
—Rachael M.
This is what it means to live an intentional life. It's not about living
a perfect life, an easy life, or getting things right all the time. It's not
even about being happy, though joy often greets you along this path.
Leading an intentional life is about keeping your actions aligned
with your beliefs. It's about penning a story that you believe in and
that you can be proud of.
DECLUTTERING YOUR MIND
Have nothing in your homes that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful.
—WILLIAM Morris
S tudies have suggested that we have 50,000 to 70,000 thoughts
per day. ? For context, if each thought were a word, that means
our minds are generating enough content to produce a book Every.
Single. Day. Unlike a book, our thoughts are not neatly composed.
On a good day they're vaguely coherent. This leaves our minds
perpetually struggling to sort this gray matter gallimaufry. Where
do you even begin? What comes first? Inevitably we find ourselves
tackling too many things at the same time, spreading our focus so
thin that nothing gets the attention it deserves. This is commonly
referred to as “being busy.” Being busy, however, is not the same
thing as being productive.
For most of us, *being busy" is code for being
functionally overwhelmed.
What do I mean by that? We don't have time because we're
working on a lot of things, yet things aren't working out a lot of the
time. This phenomenon isn't just a twenty-first-century problem,
but it has been exponentially exacerbated by the countless number
of choices technology has put at our fingertips. Should we type, text,
call, email, swipe, pin, tweet, Skype, FaceTime, Zoom, Message, or
yell at our digital assistant to get it done, whatever it is? And in what
order should all of that happen? (Oh, and before we can get started,
we'll have to upgrade, update, reboot, log in, authenticate, reset our
password, clear cookies, empty our cache, and sacrifice our firstborn
before we can get where we're going .. . where was that again?)
This freedom of choice is a double-edged privilege. Every
decision requires you to focus, and focus is an investment of your
time and energy. Both are limited—and therefore exceptionally
valuable—resources.
Warren Buffett, one of the most successful investors of all time,
gave the following advice to his trusty pilot Mike Flint. They had
been discussing Flint's long-term plans. Buffett asked Flint to draft
a list of his top 25 career goals. When he was done, Buffett asked
Flint to circle his top five. When asked about the ones he circled,
Flint replied, ^Well, the top five are my primary focus, but the other
twenty come in a close second. They are still important, so I'll work
on those intermittently as I see fit. They are not as urgent, but I still
plan to give them a dedicated effort."
To which Buffett replied, “No. You've got it wrong, Mike.
Everything you didn't circle just became your Avoid-At-All-Cost list.
No matter what, these things get no attention from you until you've
succeeded with your top five." ?
In an interview published in Vanity Fair , President Barack
Obama said, “You'll see I wear only gray or blue suits. I'm trying to
pare down decisions. I don't want to make decisions about what I'm
eating or wearing. Because I have too many other decisions to
make." #2 The same is true of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg
with his gray hoodies, or Apple founder Steve Jobs and his famous
black-turtleneck-and-jeans uniform. Acutely aware of how taxing
deliberating over options can be, they sought every opportunity to
limit choice in their lives.
As psychologist Roy F. Baumeister wrote in his book Willpower :
“No matter how rational and high-minded you try to be, you can't
make decision after decision without paying a biological price. It's
different from ordinary physical fatigue—you're not consciously
aware of being tired—but you're low on mental energy." = This state
is known as decision fatigue. In other words, the more decisions you
have to make, the harder it becomes to make them well. This is why
you're more likely to eat an unhealthy dinner at the end of the day
than an unhealthy breakfast at the beginning of the day, when you
have a full tank of willpower.
Left unchecked, decision fatigue can lead to decision avoidance.
This is especially true for big life choices, which we tend to put off
till the last minute. Daunting choices don't simply vanish; they wait
in the wings, steadily becoming more menacing. Where do I want to
go to college? Do I want to marry this person? Should I take that
new job? By the time you're finally forced to make a decision, at the
tail end of all the other decisions you've been making to avoid
having to make this big one, chances are you don't have a lot of
focus left to spare. No wonder we often feel stressed, anxious, and
overwhelmed.
We try to treat these symptoms with even more distractions.
Drinking, eating, traveling, binge-watching, etc. Even though your
Netflix queue is four years long, somehow nothing looks good! You
can't decide, and now you're even more stressed. In order to make a
lasting difference, we need to address not the symptoms but the
cause.
We need to reduce the number of decisions we burden
ourselves with so we can focus on what matters.
The Mental Inventory
The first step to recovering from decision fatigue, to get out from
under the pile of choices weighing on you, is to get some distance
from them. You need some perspective to both clearly identify and
corral your choices. We do this by writing them down. Why write
them down? Each decision, until it's been made and acted on, is
simply a thought. Holding on to thoughts is like trying to catch fish
with your bare hands: They easily slip from your grasp and
disappear back into the muddy depths of your mind. Writing things
down allows us to capture our thoughts and examine them in the
light of day. By externalizing our thoughts, we begin to declutter our
minds. Entry by entry, we're creating a mental inventory of all the
choices consuming our attention. It's the first step to taking back
control over our lives. Here is where you can begin to filter out the
signal from the noise. Here is where your Bullet Journal journey
will begin.
Just like when organizing a closet, we need to take everything out
before we can decide what stays and what goes. Creating a mental
inventory is a simple technique that will help you quickly take stock
of what you've been jamming into your mental closet. Chances are
there are a lot of useless responsibilities hogging valuable mental
and emotional real estate up there.
To begin, sit down with that sheet of paper I mentioned you'd be
needing. Orient it horizontally and divide it into three columns (you
can either fold it twice or draw the lines like in the Mental
Inventory on this page ).
1. In the first column, list all the things you are presently working
on.
2. In the second, list all the things you should be working on.
3. In the last column, list the things you want to be working on.
Keep your entries short and in list form. If one task sparks a
stream of others, go with it. Give yourself some time with this
exercise, and dig deep. Be honest. Get it out of your head (and your
heart) and lay it out on the page. Take a deep breath and begin.
MENTAL INVENTORY
Working on
Taxes
Presentation for Acme Co
Cleaning up photo library
Emmy dinner party planning
Should be working on
Workout plan
Learn how to invest
Weekly meal plans
Set 5-year goal
Call 'rents
Get a checkup
Retirement plan
Want to be working on
Plan trip to Hawaii
Learn to cook
Learn another language
Read more
Write more
Lose 10 pounds
More time with friends
The Test
This Mental Inventory you just created provides a clear picture of
how you're currently investing your time and energy. It's a map of
your choices. The next step is to figure out which ones are worth
making.
We're so busy with all the things we're doing (or should be
doing) that we forget to ask ourselves why we're doing these things.
We end up burdening ourselves with all sorts of unnecessary
responsibilities. The Mental Inventory grants us the opportunity to
take a step back and ask why.
Go ahead, ask why for each item on your list. You don't need to
dive down an existential rabbit hole. Simply ask yourself two
questions:
1. Does this matter? (To you or to someone you love)
2. Is this vital? (Think rent, taxes, student loans, your job, etc.)
TIP: If you struggle to answer these questions about a given item,
ask yourself what would happen if said item just didn't get done.
Ever . Would there be any real repercussions?
Any item that doesn't pass this test is a distraction. It adds little
to no value to your life. Cross it off. Be ruthless. Keep in mind that
each task is an experience waiting to be born, offering a glimpse into
your potential future. That's why everything on your list has to fight
for its life to stay there. More accurately, each item needs to fight
for the opportunity to become part of your life.
TASK | >
IS IT VITAL?
NO
DOES IT MATTER?
No
mpm
COISTR ACTION)
When you're done, you'll probably be left with two types of tasks:
things you need to do (your responsibilites) and things you want to
do (that is, your goals). Throughout the course of this book, I will
show you ways you can push forward on both fronts. For now,
though, you have all the ingredients needed to populate your Bullet
Journal. All, that is, except for your notebook.
Now you may be asking, Why didn't we just do this in our
notebook? It's a fair question. As you read this book, ponder the
ideas, and try out the techniques, you might find yourself paring
back your Mental Inventory even more. When you christen your
Bullet Journal, you should do so with only things that you believe
are important or will add value to your life. Being intentional about
what you let into your life is a practice that shouldn't be limited to
the pages of your notebook.
NOTEBOOKS
Journal writing is a voyage to the interior.
—CHRISTINA BALDWIN
P eople who are new to BuJo often ask about the notebook. Can't
we just use an app for keeping lists? The short answer is sure. In
fact, there are a lot of good productivity apps out there. I worked on
some myself! As a digital product designer, I can fully appreciate
how powerful and effective digital tools can be. In fact, the Bullet
Journal was designed using some methodologies leveraged in
software development. That said, there's a lot more to Bullet
Journaling than keeping lists. It’s a comprehensive methodology
designed to help us capture, order, and examine our experience. As
you move through this book, you'll see exactly how and why your
notebook will serve you well in this regard. Here, we'll look at the
foundational reasons behind the notebook.
Technology removes barriers and distances between people and
information. We can learn about almost anything, or communicate
with anyone, at any time, from anywhere, just by tapping our phone.
It's a convenience that we avail ourselves of, on average, every 12
minutes! 2 All of this convenience, however, comes at a price—and I
don't mean the cost of your data plan, your cable bundle, or the
pieces of your soul you sacrifice as you try to reason with your
provider's customer service.
In a world where Wi-Fi boosters are attached to church steeples,
no place remains sacred. + From the boardroom to the bathroom,
technology has flooded our lives with more content than we can
possibly absorb, washing away our attention spans in the process.
Studies suggest that your concentration suffers simply by having
your smartphone in the room with you, even if it's silent or powered
off! 4
In 2016, the average American spent nearly eleven hours in front
of digital screens each day. » Factoring in six to eight hours of sleep
(which is also compromised by our phones 2), we're left with
around six hours of non-screen time per day. Now consider the time
spent commuting, cooking, and running errands, and you can see
where this is headed: We're steadily decreasing the amount of time
we have to stop and think.
Sitting down with your notebook grants you that precious luxury.
It provides a personal space, free from distraction, where you can
get to know yourself better. This is one of the main reasons we use a
notebook to Bullet Journal: It forces us to go offline.
Our notebook serves as a mental sanctuary where we
are free to think, reflect, process, and focus.
The blank pages of your notebook offer a safe playground for
your mind, where you're completely free to express yourself without
judgment or expectation. As soon as you put pen to paper, you
establish a direct link to your mind and often your heart. This
experience has yet to be properly replicated in the digital space. It's
why, to this day, so many ideas are born on scraps of paper.
Another reason we use notebooks? Flexibility. Software tends to
be either so powerful that its wealth of features is buried to all but
the most intrepid explorers (think Excel) or so specific that it
sacrifices features for increased usability, essentially doing few
things very well (think mobile apps). In both cases, they force you
to operate within a framework of their choosing. This is the main
challenge with many productivity systems: They struggle to address
the limitless variability and evolutionary nature of our individual
needs. Notebooks, in contrast, are beholden to their authors. Their
function is limited only by the imagination of their owner.
The power of the Bullet Journal is that it becomes
whatever you need it to be, no matter what season of
life you're in.
In school, it can serve for your class notes. At work, it can be a
tool to organize your projects. At home, it can help you set and track
your goals. Robyn C., for example, was able to meditate for 432
consecutive days by designing a meditation tracker in her Bullet
Journal. She did the same when trying to figure out what triggered
her sleeping disorder. I didn't invent her tools; she did.
Because of the way the Bullet Journal is structured, it can be
multiple things at the same time. Rather than a tool, think of it as a
tool kit. It allows you to funnel a lot of your productivity needs into
one place. You'll enjoy a more comprehensive perspective on your
life, one that can allow you to spot unconventional connections. As
Bullet Journalist Bert Webb put it: ^As I do daily, weekly, and
monthly reviews, leafing forward and backward in my Bullet
Journal, my brain inevitably makes more links between ideas that I
was not able to do when using my various separate digital tools."
The other great thing is that you start fresh each day. With digital
trackers, you step onto their track—somewhere in the middle of the
endless race that started when you set up the tracker and ends... ?
Your notebook greets you each morning with the pure, blank slate
of an empty page. It serves as a small reminder that the day is as yet
unwritten. It will become what you make of it. As Bullet Journalist
Kevin D. notes: ^I used to feel bad about items undone at the end of
the day, but with the Bullet Journal I feel empowered to move
yesterday's open bullets forward to a new page, because I see each
day as a fresh start."
Finally, your notebook evolves as you do. You might say that you
co-iterate. It will conform to your ever-changing needs. The lovely
side effect is that as the years pass, you're creating a record of your
choices, and the ensuing experiences. As Bullet Journalist Kim
Alvarez once put it, “Each Bullet Journal contributes another
volume to a library of your life." In the pursuit of meaning, this
library becomes a powerful resource to have at your disposal.
By recording our lives, we're simultaneously creating a rich
archive of our choices and our actions for future reference. We can
study our mistakes and learn from them. It's equally instructive to
note our successes, our breakthroughs. When something works
professionally or personally, it helps to know what our
circumstances were at the time and what choices we made. Studying
our failures and our victories can provide tremendous insight,
guidance, and motivation as we plot our way forward.
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So are the Bullet Journal method and apps mutually exclusive?
Of course not. There are many apps that make my life easier in ways
that a notebook never could. All tools, whether digital or analog, are
only as valuable as their ability to help you accomplish the task at
hand. The goal of this book is to introduce you to a new tool kit for
your workshop—one that has proven effective at helping countless
others tackle the often ungainly project called life.
HANDWRITING
The palest ink is better than the best memory.
—CHINESE PROVERB
W e breathe life into our thoughts by committing them to paper.
Be they words, images, or notes, few tools facilitate the
transition between the inner and outer worlds as seamlessly as the
tip of a pen. In a world moving toward untextured interfaces, it may
seem like an awkward step backward to implement a methodology
that requires you to write things out the old-fashioned way. But a
growing body of research points to the continued practicality of the
handwritten word in our digital age.
A University of Washington study demonstrated that elementary
school students who wrote essays by hand were far more likely to
write in fully formed sentences and learn how to read faster. Much
of this is due to how handwriting accelerates and deepens our
ability to form—and therefore recognize—characters. *
The complex tactile movement of writing by hand stimulates our
mind more effectively than typing. It activates multiple regions of
the brain simultaneously, thereby imprinting what we learn on a
deeper level. As a result, we retain information longer than we
would by tapping it into an app. 2 In one study, college students
who were asked to take lecture notes by hand tested better on
average than those who had typed out their notes. They were also
able to better retain this information long after the exam. +.
When we put pen to paper, we’re not just turning on
the lights; we're also turning up the heat. Writing by
hand helps us think and feel simultaneously.
These studies and many like them indicate that the benefits of
writing by hand stem from the very complaint consistently
leveraged against it: inefficiency. That's right: The fact that it takes
longer to write things out by hand gives handwriting its cognitive
edge.
It's pretty much impossible to hand-transcribe lectures or
meeting conversations verbatim. When we write by hand, we're
forced to be more economical and strategic with our use of
language, crafting notes in our own words. To do that, we have to
listen more closely, think about the information, and essentially
distill others' words and thoughts through our own neurological
filtration system and onto the page. Typing notes, in contrast, can
quickly become rote: a frictionless highway where information
freely passes in one ear and right out the other.
Why is it so important to craft notes in your own words? The
science suggests that writing by hand enhances the way we engage
with information, strengthening our associative thinking. It allows
us to form new connections that can yield unconventional solutions
and insights. We're simultaneously expanding our awareness and
deepening our understanding.
How we synthesize our experiences shapes the way we perceive
and interact with the world. This is why journaling has proven to be
a powerful therapeutic tool in treating people who suffer from
trauma or mental illness. Expressive writing, for example, helps us
process painful experiences by externalizing them through long-
form journaling. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) uses scripts to
treat people obsessing over intrusive thoughts. A distressing
thought is detailed in a short paragraph. This script is then written
over and over again until the thought begins to lose its death grip on
the person's mind, granting some much-needed perspective and
distance—something we all struggle to find when dealing with
challenging situations.
Toward our latter days, writing can help preserve our most
cherished memories. Studies suggest that the act of writing keeps
our minds sharper for longer. I've received many emails over the
years praising Bullet Journal for helping those with poor memories
stay organized, regardless of age. For instance, Bridget Bradley, a
fifty-one-year-old Bullet Journalist, now remembers “what the
weather was like three months ago, how many times I went to the
gym last month, that I have made a reservation (by email) for that
restaurant table, that I am going on holiday in July, and that I have
already worked out what I need to take with me (six months in
advance!) so that I have time to buy and prepare for it." Similarly,
I've heard from numerous people who found that Bullet Journaling
helped their memory improve after being compromised by trauma
or medical procedures.
A dear friend of mine once told me, “The long way is the short
way." In a cut-and-paste world that celebrates speed, we often
mistake convenience for efficiency. When we take shortcuts, we
forfeit opportunities to slow down and think. Writing by hand, as
nostalgic and antiquated as it may seem, allows us to reclaim that
opportunity. As we craft our letters, we automatically start filtering
the signal from the noise. True efficiency is not about speed; it's
about spending more time with what truly matters. In the end,
that's what the Bullet Journal method is all about.
THE SYSTEM
LION
planner
THE SYSTEM
Y our Bullet Journal can be your to-do list, journal, planner,
sketchbook, or all of the above, all in one place. This flexibility
stems from its modular structure. An easy way to conceptualize the
system is to imagine the pieces of a Lego set. Each piece of the
Bullet Journal's system serves a specific function, be it ordering
your day, planning your month, or tackling a goal. You're free to mix
and match the pieces to customize the system to meet your needs.
As those needs inevitably change over time, this flexibility allows
the system to adapt and remain relevant through the different
seasons of your life. As you evolve, so will the function and
structure of your Bullet Journal.
In this part of the book, we'll examine the core building blocks
that lay the foundation of the system. You'll learn how they work,
why they work, and how they snap into the larger framework. If
you're following along in sequence, here's where you'll learn how to
set up your own Bullet Journal and migrate the content from your
Mental Inventory.
If you're an old hand at this, Part II aims to take your BuJoJitsu
to the next level. We'll delve into the tools and techniques you've
been using and explore the reasoning behind their design. This
section functions both as a reference and a guide to help answer any
questions that may have bubbled up during your time Bullet
Journaling.
If you're new to the Bullet Journal, I suggest reading through all
the chapters in this part before setting pen to paper. Each method
and technique is effective on its own, but the true power of the
Bullet Journal is found in the sum of its parts. To get the most out
of your BuJo experience, it's important to understand how these
parts interact and influence each other. This part will walk you
through each step, how it works, and how to set up your own Bullet
Journal step by step.
Before We Dive In...
Most of the organizational methods people tried to shove down my
throat didn't make sense, felt impractical, and left me feeling
frustrated and/or demoralized. Those are the last things I want you
to feel!
I've done my best to avoid making this part read like stereo
instructions, but it's unavoidably technical. At first glance, it may
look like there are a lot of moving parts. As you read through the
following chapters, I invite you to consider each component
individually. Hold it up to the light; examine it. Ask yourself: Would
this help me?
If at some point you feel overwhelmed, take a step back and start
by implementing only the pieces that make sense. Most
components are self-contained by design, so you can effectively use
them even if you don't use the rest. Start with what speaks to you—
even if it's just one piece—and build from there. This is also the way
the Bullet Journal was born: one workable piece at a time.
KEY CONCEPTS
INDEX INDEX
Used to locate your content in your Bullet Journal
Future Log: 5-8
using Topics and page numbers. ers
Gym Log: 15-16
Used to store Future Tasks and Events that fall
outside the current month.
FUTURE LOG FUTURE LOG
Feb Mas
Aer Jal
5
MONTHLY LOG JANUARY JANUARY
Provides an overview of time and tasks for the
: * Donate Clothes
current month. Also functions as your monthly * Plan Trig
mental inventory. * Back up site
* Dentist
* Daycare
DAILY LOG 01.01.46 me
Serves as your catchall for Rapid Logging your * Donate Clothes * Tim: call
thoughts throughout each day o Promotedt * Yoga: cancel
X Back up site - office closed Fri.
= Jen in town fir o bns party
* Book daycare
Using short-form notation paired with symbols to quickly capture, categorize, and
prioritize your thoughts into Notes, Events, and Tasks.
— Note
9 Event
* Task
X Task Complete
7 Task Migrated
< Task Scheduled
The modular building blocks of BuJo, used to store related FUTURE
content. The core collections are the Index, Future Log, INDEX Log
Monthly Log, and Daily Log, but you can create one for
anything you want to keep track of.
MONTHLY DAILY
LoG LoG
The monthly process of filtering out meaningless
content from your notebook.
— INTENTION)
e BÉ
COISTRACTION)
RAPID LOGGING
uick—what was the last meaningful thing someone said to you?
Okay, let's try an easier category: What did you eat for lunch two
days ago? If you're drawing a blank, you're not alone. It goes to
show that we can't rely on memory to accurately capture our
experience.
Our experiences—both sweet and sour—are lessons. We honor
these lessons by writing them down so we can study them and see
what they have to teach us. This is how we learn, this is how we
grow. If we forfeit the opportunity to learn from our experiences, as
the saying (sort of) goes, we condemn ourselves to repeat our
mistakes.
Journaling provides a powerful way of facilitating this path of
self-learning. The problem with traditional journaling is that it is
loosely structured and time-intensive. Rapid Logging leverages the
best aspects of journaling by stripping away everything that's not
essential. It's the language the Bullet Journal is written in. In short,
Rapid Logging helps us capture and organize our thoughts as living
lists.
Rapid Logging will help you efficiently capture your
life as it happens so that you may begin to study it.
On the following pages you'll find visual examples illustrating
the difference between content captured in a more traditional way
and the same information organized with Rapid Logging. We'll
break down the symbols and structure in detail later, but it's easy to
see how succinct and clear the Rapid Log is. This streamlined
approach to recording our thoughts saves a lot of time, allowing it to
easily fit into our busy lives.
As Bullet Journalist Ray Cheshire describes: “I’m a high school
science teacher at a big inner-city school in the UK. Things can get a
little hectic at times as we try to cram ever more stuff into our days.
This is where Rapid Logging comes in. For example, we were told
that an inspection was going to happen at very short notice, but
thanks to Bullet Journaling, I quickly knew what I still had to do
before the inspectors arrived."
Be it at home, school, or the workplace, Rapid Logging will help
you organize the dizzying array of things you have to contend with
on a daily basis.
TRADITIONAL
Call Keith back to figure out where we should eat this weekend.
L] Email Heather again regarding the Acme Co release forms for project participants.
Need to send out the forms to them and have their signatures before we proceed.
The Acme Co UX presentation is due February 12.
C s ERSTE ! he’shavyi Aor 24.
The office will be closed on the 13th.
| was happily surprised that Margaret seems to have taken her feedback to heart. She
volunteered to help manage the assets for the project and has become a more engaged
part of the team. Her work is also showing progress.
O Call to cancel yoga orientation.
L] Order Kim a birthday cake for next week on Thursday. It has to be gluten-free
because she is celiac.
L Add hours for Acme Co project to the time tracker.
Broadway was blocked on my way to work this morning, so | had to take a detour. On
the way | spotted a new coffee shop | have to try. It's also a lot more scenic a route. |
put the windows down and just enjoyed the ride. | get so caught up in rushing to work
that | totally forgot about this route. By the time | got to work, | was feeling pretty good
even though | was a little late.
L] Plan trip
225 words
RAPID LOGGING
04.01.TH
* Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
Y * Acme Co: Release forms
* Heather: Email to get forms
7 Email forms to participants
< Get signatures
— Acme Co: UX presentation Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
? Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
04.02.FR
% Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party’s on Thursday
X * Acme Co: Log hours
9 Broadway blocked, had to take long way
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived
* Plan trip
TOPICS AND PAGINATION
T he first step in Rapid Logging is to frame the content you're
about to log. You do this by giving your page a Topic name. It can
be as simple as “Shopping List." Even here—as with most things
BuJo—there is more than meets the eye. Topics actually serve three
functions:
1. They identify and describe content.
2. They serve as an opportunity for you to clarify your intention.
3. They set the agenda for the content.
How many meetings have you sat through that have little to no
agenda? Generally, they're not very productive. Pausing to define
the agenda before you start allows you to focus, prioritize, and use
your time far more effectively.
Giving your page its Topic provides that opportunity to pause.
What will you capture in this space? What's its purpose? What
value will it add to your life? These may seem like superfluous
considerations, but I can't tell you how many times I've sat down to
make yet another list, only to realize that it simply wouldn't add
anything meaningful to my life. Does tracking the TV shows I've
watched this year add any real value? No. I can reinvest that time I
saved into something that does. Other times, that pause has helped
me refine my aims, keeping the content of my Bullet Journal
focused and relevant. Topic by Topic, pause by pause, we're honing
our ability to focus on what matters.
Often all it takes to live intentionally is to pause
before you proceed.
Lastly, a good Topic turns your Bullet Journal into a more useful
reference. Who knows when you may need to look back through
your journal to find a specific Topic? "Oct 13, Meeting 4 notes" says
little, whereas *10.13.TH (month/date/day) / Acme Co. (client
name) / Website Relaunch (project name) / User Feedback
(meeting priority)" provides you with a useful description.
Once you've defined your Topic, write it at the top of the page.
Now you've laid the foundation for what you want to build, but you
can't locate a building without its address. That address in your
Bullet Journal is the page number, so be sure to add them as you go.
Page numbers will be critical when we get to Indexing (this page ).
Spoiler alert: Your Index helps you quickly locate your content.
The only time we don't use a descriptive Topic is for our Daily
Log (this page ). It's a catchall for our thoughts, so the daily Topic is
simply the date, formatted as month/date/day. This will help you
quickly orient yourself when flipping through your pages.
All this is more complicated to explain than it is to do. In
practice, you're just taking a few seconds to think before putting pen
to paper. Now, with the Topic and page number in place, your page
is prepared to handle anything you throw at it.
* Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
* Acme Co: Release forms
* Heather: Email to get forms
* Email forms to participants
* Get signatures
— Acme Co: UX presentation — Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
? Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
* Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party's on Thursday
* Acme Co: Log hours
© Broadway blocked, had to take long way
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived
* Plan trip
BULLETS
I f Rapid Logging is the language the Bullet Journal is written in,
Bullets are the syntax. Once you've set up your Topic and page
number, you capture your thoughts as short, objective sentences
known as Bullets. Each Bullet is paired with a specific symbol to
categorize your entry. We use Bullets not only because it takes less
time, but also because wrestling information into short sentences
forces us to distill what's most valuable.
Crafting effective Bullets requires striking a balance between
brevity and clarity. If an entry is too short, we may not be able to
decipher it later. If it's too long, then writing down your thoughts
becomes a chore. For example, “Return call ASAP!” is too short.
Who are you calling back? What are you calling them back about?
It's easy to forget all that in the rush of the day. Conversely, *Call
John M. back as soon as you can because he needs to know when
you will have the sales figures for June ready for him" is an overly
informative word salad. Let's try again: “Call John M, re: June sales
figures." You're saying exactly the same thing using only a quarter
of the words. In a bit, I'll also show you how to turn that Task into a
priority using Signifiers (this page ).
Keeping your entries short without losing meaning takes
practice, but over time it hones our ability to identify what's worth
writing down. That's important because our lives are infinitely
complex, and there is potentially a lot to keep track of. If you've
kept lists in the past, you're familiar with how quickly they can
spiral out of control. They often lack context and priority. Rapid
Logging solves this issue in a few ways, first by categorizing entries
into:
1. Things that you need to do (Tasks)
2. Your experiences (Events)
3. Information you don't want to forget (Notes)
Each category is assigned a symbol to upgrade a basic list with
much-needed additional layers of context and function. During the
day, these symbols allow you to quickly capture and contextualize
your thoughts in real time. Later on, they make locating specific
content much easier as you scan through your pages. Let's take a
look at each category and see how this syntax can keep your entries
organized, lean, and effective.
TASKS
T he Task bullet does a lot of heavy lifting. Think of it as a
checkbox. (Older versions of the Bullet Journal used an actual
checkbox, but eventually it became clear that checkboxes weren't as
efficient as the dot Bullet: They take more time to draw and can
look sloppy, decreasing legibility.) The Task * * " bullet is fast,
clean, and flexible. It can easily be transformed into other shapes,
which is important, because Tasks can have five different states:
* Tasks:
Entries that require you to take action.
Y Completed Tasks:
Action has been completed.
7 Migrated Tasks:
Tasks that have been moved forward (hence the right arrow)
into your next Monthly Log (this page ) or into a specific
Collection (this page ).
€. Scheduled Tasks:
A Task tied to a date that falls outside of the current month and
is therefore moved backward (hence the left arrow) into the
Future Log (this page ) at the front of your book.
Sometimes the things we task ourselves with end up not
mattering anymore. Their meaning simply expires or
circumstances change. If it no longer matters, then it's a
distraction. Strike it off your list. One less thing to worry about.
Subtasks and Master Tasks
Some Tasks require multiple steps to complete. These dependencies
—or Subtasks—can be listed by simply indenting them directly
below their Master Task. Master Tasks can only be marked as
complete once all of the Subtasks have also been completed or
marked as irrelevant.
TIP: When you notice a Master Task spawning a lot of Subtasks, it
can indicate that this Task is growing into a project. If that's the
case, you may want to turn this nested list into its own Collection
(this page ). Planning a trip, for example, can be complex, with
Tasks ranging from researching locations to arranging
transportation—each of which might have Subtasks (check out X, Y,
and Z hotels online; price flights and rent a car). If you notice that a
Task is turning into a project, but you don't have time at that
moment to set up a new Collection, just log a Task to remind you to
set one uplater: ^ * Create Hawaii Vacation Collection." This is a
perfect example of how Bullets can serve as mental anchors.
— Acme Co: UX presentation Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
? Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
04.02.FR
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party's on Thursday
© Broadway blocked, had to take long way
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived
Writing down Tasks serves a dual purpose. First, having a record of
an open task makes it easier to remember even when you're away
from your journal, partly due to a phenomenon known as the
Zeigarnik effect. Russian psychiatrist and psychologist Bluma
Wulfovna Zeigarnik observed that the staff at her local restaurant
was able to remember complex unfilled orders until they were filled,
at which point they forgot the details. The friction of an unfinished
Task actively engages your mind. Second, by logging Tasks and their
state, you'll also automatically create an archive of your actions.
This becomes immensely valuable during Reflection (this page ), or
when you review your notebook days, months, or years from now.
You'll always know what you were working toward.
EVENTS
E vents—represented by the “©” bullet—are experience-related
entries that can either be scheduled preemptively (for example,
"Charlie's birthday party”) or logged after they occur (for example,
"Signed the lease. Yay!").
Event entries, no matter how personal or emotionally taxing,
should remain as objective and brief as possible. The Event ^Movie
night" bears no more or less weight than “He dumped me." Not
having to articulate the complexity of an experience makes it much
more likely for us to write it down. That's the most important part:
to have a record.
After a painful event, trying to explain how you feel in the
moment can be exceptionally challenging, if not outright
impossible. A joyful event can bring complex feelings, too—
everything from gratitude to triumph to tears because a special
loved one wasn't there to share it. In both cases, they can be
overwhelming and distracting. Event bullets allow you to put a pin
in an experience, to temporarily offload it from your mind, so you
can refocus on other priorities. This way you have a record safely
stored in your journal, ready for you to revisit whenever you have
more time, perspective, or wherewithal to sort out your emotional
bureaucracy.
04.01.TH
Y Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
* Acme Co: Release forms
* Heather: Email to get forms
7 Email forms to participants
€ Get signatures
— Acme Co: UX presentation Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
04.02.FR
Y Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party's on Thursday
* Acme Co: Log hours
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived
* Plan trip
Take, for example, Michael S., who met a woman who he was
quite taken with. It was only a few months into the relationship,
and everything seemed to indicate a strong bond and bright future.
One day she invited him out to dinner. Sitting there, he could tell
something was off, so he asked her what was going on. She told him
that she no longer wanted to see him. Blindsided, he asked why. She
didn't know, but it was over.
Michael was left tormented by the confusing loss of something
he believed to be potentially rare and special. A few weeks later, he
picked up his Bullet Journal, which held the full record of their
relationship, and leafed through their history one page at a time. He
was shocked to discover that at no point during the rather brief
relationship had things been nearly as good as he remembered.
Entry after entry painted a picture of a rather distant person who
was never particularly kind to him. The reality of the situation,
penned in his own words, provided the perspective he needed to
move on.
It was an important moment of clarity that enabled this Bullet
Journalist to gain valuable insight that would not have been
available to him otherwise. This is just one example of how having
an objective account of your experience can be a powerful tool in
helping you move through life. BuJo is not all about highlighting
the doom and gloom, though; it can make you mindful of positives,
too. We may finish our year feeling that not much of note really
happened—maybe we didn't take that big Hawaii trip or get the
promotion we'd hoped for, or maybe we thought we'd be further
along in our apartment hunt than we are. We're all programmed
with a negativity bias. Leafing through our Bullet Journal can help
correct this perspective: There were celebrations, projects
completed, fitness milestones achieved, clean bills of health
conferred, children and pets doing adorable things, soulful talks
with friends, kids, parents, or spouses, and on and on.
Our memories are unreliable. We often trick ourselves into
believing things about our experiences that are biased and
inaccurate. Studies suggest that our recollection of how we felt can
greatly differ from the way an experience actually made us feel. We
can remember wonderful events in a negative way, and negative
events in a positive way. Harvard psychologist Dan Gilbert likens
our memories to painted portraits instead of photographs, where
our mind artistically interprets memory. ??
It's important to keep an accurate record of how things actually
happened, because we often make decisions based on our past
experiences. If we operate entirely on memory, we're apt to repeat
our mistakes by fooling ourselves into believing that something had
an effect it actually did not. Good or bad, big or small, jot it down.
Over the days, months, and years, they will form a pretty accurate
roadmap of your life. Understanding how we got to where we are
today will allow us to make more informed decisions as we plot our
course forward.
TIP: I recommend unpacking experiences as soon as possible after
the Event, so the details are fresh and accurate. The Daily Reflection
(this page ) works well toward this end.
TIP: Events that need to be scheduled on specific dates that fall
outside of the current month are added to the Future Log (this page
). Like birthdays, meetings, and dinners.
TIP: For those of you who enjoy writing, long-form or expressive
journaling (this page ), you can nest Note bullets (this page ) under
an Event bullet if there are important/interesting details that you
want to capture about an experience for later use. Again, keep it
brief:
? Date with Sam at El Pastor
— She was 15 minutes late. Didn't text. Didn't apologize.
— Made fun of the fact that | dressed up for the date.
— She ordered a lot and didn't eat much. Didn't offer to pay.
— The guac was incredible.
NOTES
R epresented with the *- " dash, Notes include facts, ideas,
thoughts, and observations. They log information you want to
remember that isn't immediately or necessarily actionable. This
type of bullet works well for meetings, lectures, and classrooms...
we all know what notes are, so I won't belabor the point. That said,
few of us are ever taught how to take them. Let's delve into the tips,
tricks, and benefits of taking notes the Bullet Journal way.
By keeping your Notes short, you're forced to distill information
down to the essential. The more content you try to capture during a
lecture or a meeting, the less you're thinking about what's being
said. You burn through most of your attention parroting the source.
Being both strategic and economical with your word choices
forces you to engage your mind. By asking yourself what's
important and why , you go from passively listening to actively
hearing what's being said. It's when we begin to hear that
information can transform into understanding. A main focus of
Bullet Journaling is to get better at hearing the world around us as
well as the one within so we can begin to understand. More of that
in Part III.
04.01.TH
Y Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
* Acme Co: Release forms
* Heather: Email to get forms
7 Email forms to participants
€ Get signatures
|
© Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
04.02.FR
Y Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
* Acme Co: Log hours
© Broadway blocked, had to take long way
* Plan trip
Let It Sink In
Don't immediately bail when the meeting, class, or lecture is over.
Information is contextual. When you're being exposed to new
information, the story unfolds one piece at a time. It's not until the
end that you'll see how the pieces fit together. Once the event is
over, take a few moments and use the time to your advantage. Sit
for a while and give yourself a moment to process what you heard.
Capture whatever surfaces. Often you'll gain new insight when you
can better contextualize the information as a whole. Take a step
back, review your notes, see what else bubbles up, and write it
down. This is a great opportunity to fill gaps in your understanding
or highlight them. Having a list of questions can help your next
interaction be far more targeted and productive. Curiosity is also a
strong source of motivation, which can help facilitate proactive
engagement with the content. If you really want to know something,
you'll find out.
Make It Yours
Whenever possible, try to latch on to information that you can
relate to, that genuinely interests you. Here is one example of how
you can apply all of these tips:
Source: *Some groups of animals enjoy unusual colloquial
names. A group of flamingos is called a flamboyance of
flamingos. A group of crows is known as a murder of crows.... A
group of pugs is known as a grumble of pugs."
Ineffective Note: Some animal groups have names.
Effective Note: A group of pugs is called a grumble! A murder
of crows!
Although the first Note is succinct, if you read it weeks from now,
you might be confused, thinking the Note referred to *nammals,"
“reptiles,” or “lagomorphs.” The second bullet, on the other hand,
binds the information to something you care about (in this case
pugs; if you don't like pugs—you heartless monster—then maybe
crows would be better) and helps you extrapolate a lot more
information. If groups of pugs and crows have unusual names, then
it stands to reason that other groups of animals may as well. This
succinct-yet-specific Note might trigger additional recollections
about the topic. You might even set up a Task to look up more
information.
One simple way to summarize all these tips is this: Keep your
future self in mind. Your Notes will be useless if they can't be
deciphered in a week, month, or year from now. Do your future self
a kindness and don't sacrifice clarity for brevity. It will keep your
Bullet Journal valuable for years to come.
SIGNIFIERS AND CUSTOM BULLETS
T he Task, Event, and Note bullets will serve you well in most
situations. That said, everyone's needs are different. One size
does not fit all. This is a core tenet of Bullet Journaling. This is why
you're encouraged to customize the system once you're comfortable
with the basics. We'll fully explore how to do this in Part IV, but for
now, I'd like to give you a glimpse into fine-tuning your Bullet
Journal to suit your needs through Signifiers and Custom Bullets.
Signifiers
Another way the Rapid Logging improves on the functionality of
lists is through the use of Signifiers. These are symbols used to
highlight specific entries to give them additional context. Signifiers
are placed in front of bullets so they stick out from the rest of your
list, making them easy for the scanning eye to locate (this page ).
Here are some examples of Signifiers that I've found to be helpful:
04.01.TH
* Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
* Heather: Email to get forms
7 Email forms to participants
€ Get signatures
— Acme Co: UX presentation Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
© Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
04.02.FR
Y Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party's on Thursday
9 Broadway blocked, had to take long way
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived
6699
Priority: Represented by “*” asterisk. Used to mark a bullet as
important and is most commonly paired with the Task Bullet.
Use this sparingly. If everything is a priority, nothing is.
Inspiration: Represented by “!” exclamation point. Most
commonly paired with a Note. Great ideas, personal mantras,
and genius insights will never be misplaced again!
Custom Bullets
Custom Bullets help you quickly capture entries that are unique to
your situation. For example, people who delegate a lot of Tasks can
add another state to the Task Bullet by turning it into a forward
slash, indicating that it was assigned to someone else:
# Presentation. @KevinB pulling numbers
When Kevin pulls the numbers, you can then just turn the “/”
forward slash into an “X” to mark it as complete.
Custom Bullets are the way to go when you have recurring Tasks
or Events like “Football practice.” Football practice might be an “H”
(because it looks like a field goal). You can quickly add this Bullet to
the Calendar page in your Monthly Log (this page ), so you can see
when practice is at a glance. Feel free to use letters instead of icons
if they help you remember.
TIP: Keep Custom Bullets and Signifiers to an absolute
minimum. Rapid Logging tries to remove as much friction as
possible from capturing information. The more you invent, the
more complex it is, and the slower you will become.
Rapid Logging Summary
Now we've walked through all the steps of Rapid Logging, a quick
and effective way to capture and sort your thoughts into Tasks,
Events, and Notes. You contain those thoughts with a Topic to help
you set your intention and a page number to easily locate it again
later.
Rapid Logging is designed to help you contend with the daily
grind. It will allow you to offload all the information you're
bombarded with and emerge from a chaotic day with a clear
categorized list of prioritized thought.
COLLECTIONS
#bulletjournalcollection
N o matter how organized you try to be, life is messy and often
wildly unpredictable. The Bullet Journal embraces the chaos by
not trying to fight it. It trades in the linear structure of traditional
planners for a modular approach.
Like a Lego set, BuJo is comprised of modular blocks. Each
module is a template designed to organize and collect related
information; that’s why we refer to them as Collections. Collections
are interchangeable, reusable, and customizable. Maybe last month
you created a shopping list, organized a trip, and prepared for a
presentation. This month, however, you may need to create a
fertility tracker, set up a party, and plan your meals. Whatever
information you need to organize, there is a Collection for that. If
you can’t find one, you’re encouraged to invent one of your own
(more on that in Part IV).
The portfolio of Collections—also known as your Stack—that you
choose to use is entirely up to you, and it will change over time. This
makes the Bullet Journal incredibly flexible and allows it to
continuously adapt to a wide variety of uses. This is also why the
Bullet Journals you see online don’t look similar to one another.
Each Bullet Journal reflects the unique needs of its user at that
moment in time.
In the following pages you'll learn about the four core
Collections: the Daily Log, the Monthly Log, the Future Log, and the
one Collection to rule them all, the Index. These will serve as the
foundational structure for your notebook. Let’s take a closer look at
each, see how they relate to one another, and explore how they can
help order your chaos one piece at a time.
THE DAILY LOG
#bulletjournaldailylog
T he Daily Log is the workhorse of your Bullet Journal. Its
streamlined template is designed to capture your daily deluge in
real time. When you're in the thick of it, you can rely on your Daily
Log to keep your thoughts organized with very little effort so you
can focus on the task at hand.
To set up your Daily Log, all you have to do is add the day's date
and the page number. That's it! With your container in place, you're
all set to Rapid Log (this page ) your Tasks, Events, and Notes as
they occur throughout the day. The idea is to be consistently
unburdening your mind. It will be able to rest assured, knowing that
everything is safely recorded in your notebook.
Your Daily Log is more than a simple to-do list. Yes, it serves to
capture your responsibilities, but it also helps you document your
experiences. It's a safe place where your mind is free to express
itself, judgment-free and always happy to welcome your thoughts as
they bubble up throughout the day. Over time those thoughts
become a record of your state of being, which becomes incredibly
valuable when we get into Reflection (this page ). It provides the
context we often lack in our daily lives. With context we can be
more deliberate with our actions.
DAILY LOG
04.01.TH
* Keith: Call re: Saturday dinner
XY * Acme Co: Release forms
* Heather: Email to get forms
7 Email forms to participants
< Get signatures
~ Acme Co: UX presentation Feb 12
— Office closed Apr 13
? Margaret: Volunteered to help with assets
— Showing more incentive and engagement
— Increased participation effort
04.02.FR
Y Cancel yoga
* Kim: Get birthday cake
— Celiac: Needs to be gluten-free
— The party's on Thursday
¥ * Acme Co: Log hours
9 Broadway blocked, had to take long way
— Found new coffee place
— Much prettier drive
— Felt more relaxed when | arrived!
* Plan trip
l've tried my hand at nearly every organizational system available. None of them
stuck because they required me to invest a great deal of money or time to master
their technique.
| started BuJo with a 25-cent notebook and a mechanical pencil. | find BuJo is
less concerned with structure than it is with intention. | add activities and tasks to
my Daily Log as the day unfolds. The day becomes more about flow, with the Bullet
Journal as both monitor and log.
—Kevin D.
On Space
A common question I get is how much space the Daily Log requires.
My answer: as much space as that day needs, and that's something
you just can't know in advance. Some Daily Logs can span many
pages, while others won't take up half a page. It's nearly impossible
to tell how your day may unfold. Though it can be helpful to set an
intention for the day, like Today I will not complain , it's important
to remember not to set an expectation for your day, because that's
out of your control.
If our lives are oceans, then our days are waves; some
big, some small. Your Bullet Journal is the shore, and
it will be carved by both.
If you don't fill a page, add the next date wherever you left off
and you're good to go. You should never feel like you're running out
of room. This is why I advise against setting up your Daily Logs way
ahead of time. Either create them the day of or the night before.
Once you get rolling with BuJo, your Daily Log may start to feel less
like the stress-inducing to-do lists you may be accustomed to and
more like a record and a reminder to live according to your
intentions, one day at a time.
THE MONTHLY LOG
#bulletjournalmonthlylog
T his Collection helps you step back and take a breath before
diving into the coming month. It offers a bird’s-eye view of the
things you have to do, as well as your available time. If each Bullet
Journal is another volume in the story of your life, then the
Monthly Log marks a new chapter. They’re small but significant
milestones punctuating the year. Setting them up allows us to
regularly check in with ourselves so that we can maintain/regain
context, motivation, and focus.
The Monthly Log is set up on a spread of facing pages. The left
page will be your Calendar page; the right page will be your Tasks
page. The Topic of this Collection is the name of the month, and we
add it to both pages of the spread (this page ).
Calendar Page
On the Calendar page, list the dates of that month down the left
edge of the page, followed by the first letter of the corresponding
day of the week (this page ). Remember to leave some room in the
left margin so you can add Signifiers later, if needed. Signifiers will
allow you to quickly scan your Calendar page to find anything
particularly noteworthy.
Feel free to use this page like a traditional calendar, by slotting in
your Events and Tasks ahead of time. That said, nothing is set in
stone, so I prefer to log Events only after they happen. That way, the
Monthly Log’s Calendar page acts like a timeline.
This timeline is something your future self will often be grateful
for, as it can provide a lot of clarity and context—it shows you
exactly what you focused on in a given month by highlighting
precisely when it actually happened.
TIP: Keep your entries as short as possible, as the Monthly Log is
designed for reference only.
TIP: For some added clarity, you can add lines dividing the weeks.
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(CALENDAR PAGE)
FEBRUARY
Sent out newsletter. 172.5 lbs—down 5!
Dinner Michael @ Faro
Becca goodbye dinner @ Walters
Tara Brach seminar @ Omega
Mailed out tax forms
Acme Co contract signed
Game Chem Co. preso. Went well!
Jenna birthday dinner @ Ichiran
Lost heat. Lost Redrum project :(
Heat restored
Launch Sokura website!
Tasks Page (or Mental Inventory)
The Tasks page of your Monthly Log will serve as your ongoing
Mental Inventory page. Give yourself permission to sit for as long as
it takes to offload the action items that have been swimming around
your head. What matters this month? What are the priorities?
When you're done capturing your thoughts, go through the
previous month and see what Tasks remain open. Transfer any
important items into the new Monthly Log's Tasks page. We'll delve
deeper into this process in the chapter on Migration (this page ), but
for now, just know this is how Tasks don't slip through the cracks
when you Bullet Journal. We rewrite things until we get them done
or they become irrelevant.
(TASKS PAGE)
FEBRUARY
Steph: Dry ice delivery
Cancel yoga orientation
Get Kim birthday cake!
Log hours
Submit expenses
Send Linda vacation photos
Pay rent
Call Grandma
Drop off laundry
Schedule doctor's appointment
Buy dress for Vivian's wedding
Make playlist for Vivian's wedding
THE FUTURE LOG
#bulletjournalfuturelog
T he Bullet Journal unfolds organically based on what you need in
the here and now, so you may be wondering how you can plan
for the future. For this we use a Collection known as the Future
Log. The Future Log stores entries that have specific dates that fall
outside of the current month. So if it's September, and you've got a
project with a deadline of, say, December 15, shwoooops , into the
Future Log it goes.
The Future Log lives at the front of your Bullet Journal, right
after your Index (this page ). It usually requires 1-2 spreads of
facing pages and can be designed in many different ways. I've
included a lean yet effective three-month example (this page ).
So how does this work in practice? During the day, just continue
to write everything down in your Daily Log (this page ), even future
Tasks. Again, the Daily Log is there to prevent us from having to
waste time thinking about where to write things down. It's a
catchall, designed to hold our thoughts until we're ready to sort
them out. When that time comes—like during Daily Reflection (this
page )—you'll transfer any bullets with a future date from your
Daily Log into your Future Log. Once you do, be sure to mark the
entry as scheduled “<” in your Daily Log. This way you will know
that it's been addressed, so you can temporarily offload it from your
mind.
Think of the Future Log as a queue, each item eagerly waiting for
its month to arrive. When you're setting up a new Monthly Log (this
page ), be sure to scan your Future Log for any items in the queue
that are ready now. If so, migrate (this page ) those items from your
Future Log into your Monthly Log's Tasks page. Be sure to mark it
as migrated in your Future Log.
FUTURE LOG CYCLE
" e Acme: Site Presentation December 23 "
Daily Logs
(October)
l Reflection
Future Log
l Migration
Monthly Log
(December)
FUTURE LOG
OCT
9 6-7 Design Conference: NYC
* 16 Maya: Dinner
NOV
* 3 James Co: Paperwork due
* 14 Venton Vision: Submit outline
© 9-11 San Diego trip
DEC
9 11 Jonathan's birthday
XY * 15 Yay tea: Site presentation
Once you get the hang of it, it becomes an effective way of
keeping you aware of the responsibilities you're putting into your
life. Your Future Log functions as a time machine that reveals the
outline of the future you're building, so you can course correct if
necessary.
THE INDEX
#bulletjournalindex
I’ve always kept a work journal where | entered telephone conversations, meeting
notes, and other details of my workday chronologically. | also had a gazillion to-do
lists and sticky notes, a paper calendar on my desk, and, eventually, an electronic
calendar on my phone.
Whenever I needed to retrieve any notes from my work journal, I’d first have to
hunt in my calendars for the date of the meeting or phone call—or guess at when it
might have happened. Then I’d have to flip through my journals to find the date |
was looking for.
The Bullet Journal system was an awesome refinement to my chronological
system. All | do now is go to my Index, where I’ve written the page number of what
I’m seeking, and then flip right to it!
—Cheryl S. Bridges
Your Bullet Journal notebook welcomes any part of you that
you're willing to share. One moment you're planning your week; the
next, sketching out a room layout or penning a poem. While getting
lost in your notebook can be a lovely and liberating experience,
losing things in your notebook decidedly is not. At this point in the
book you may be wondering how you will keep track of all these
different Collections. In the Bullet Journal, we solve this challenge
with our Index.
The Index provides an easy way to find your thoughts
days, months, or years after entrusting them to your
notebook.
Part table of contents, part traditional index, the Index lives on
the very first pages of your notebook. You can think of the Index as
a container that stores all of your other Collections (except for your
Daily Log, for reasons I'll explain later).
I recommend allocating two spreads—four facing pages—for your
Index (if you own the official Bullet Journal notebook, the Index is
already included). To add a Collection to your Index, simply write
down the Collection's Topic and page numbers (this page ).
As you see in the example, Collections don't need to be
consecutive. Life is unpredictable and it often requires us to shift
gears, to focus on new priorities. The Index makes it easy to shift
between priorities at will. If you want to resume using a previous
Collection, but you're out of pages in the original instance, simply
flip to the next blank spread and continue the same Topic. Then all
you need to do is add the page number of this new instance back to
your Index as in the following example.
INDEX
Future Log: 1-4
January: 7
User Behavior Project:
Brainstorm: 11—12
Research: 13-18
User Behavior: 19—20
User Behavior Il: 21—22
Food Log Apr 1-7: 23-24
Reading List: 25
Drawings: 25- 29, 32, 36 *
February: 37
Subcollections
When you're working on a project with a lot of moving parts, each
of those parts deserves its own separate Subcollection. As you can
see in the example on this page , “User Behavior Project" has four
Subcollections, each dedicated to a different part of the project.
Dedicated Index
Some Bullet Journals focus on very specific subject matter. If you're
a student, it could be your current curriculum. If you're a project
manager, it could be for keeping track of all the different parts of
your project(s). In these cases, you can use an alternate approach
known as the Dedicated Index. It works much the same way as the
standard Index, except that each Index page is dedicated to one
subject only.
So if you were taking classes in science, English, math, and
history, you would set up an Index page for each. For example, if
you were taking a class in American History, one page in your Index
would have the Topic "American History." Each section of the
course would define a Master Collection, and each subject within
the section would be the Subcollection.
AMERICAN HISTORY (INDEX PAGE)
Revolutionary Wars: (Master Collection)
Battle of Lexington: 10—14
Battle of Fort Ticonderoga: 15—20
Battle of Bunker Hill: 21—32 (auboolections)
NEW ACME CO SITE
Brainstorm: 10—15
Site Design:
User flows: 16—26
User flow / review / 0419: 27—28
Wireframes: 29—40
Wireframe / review 1 / 0425: 41—43
Wireframe / review 2 / 0501: 44—46
Design: 47—52
Design / review 1 / 0510: 53-54
Design / review 2 / 0515: 55-57
User testing: 58—61, 63, 65
Site Content:
Content strategy: 70—75
Updated bios / and section descriptions: 76—83, 99
Product descriptions: 84—85, 92—94
Dedicated Indexes are not limited to the classroom. Here's an example of how it could
be used to launch a new company website.
Threading
Though the Index is an effective way to help you navigate your
notebook, some of you may be thinking that there seems to be a lot
of flipping about going on. There's a solution for this: threading.
This technique was brought to me by software engineer and
Bullet Journal community member Carey Barnett. It quickly found
a permanent home in my own practice (I love it when that
happens!). Threading is used in code to point one piece of code
toward a related piece of code. In the Bullet Journal, we use the
same concept to point to previous or later instances of related
content within our notebook.
So let's say you have a Collection (instance 1) that you started on
this page . Time goes by, and you have to shift your focus to other
things. You use up pages in your notebook. When you want to
resume your previous Collection, you create another instance
(instance 2) on this page . You shift gears again for a while, and then
you continue the Collection on this page (instance 3).
To thread these instances together, all you have to do is add the
page number of one instance next to the page numbers of the other
instances. So if you're at the start of instance 2, you would write
“10” next to this page (threading back to instance 1, which is on this
page ). At the end of instance 2, next to this page , you would write
“160,” threading forward to instance 3 (on these pages ). Now you
can quickly flip between instances without using your Index.
THREADING
Previous Instance Next Instance
This technique has since been further expanded by community
member Kim Alvarez to work with threading entire notebooks! If
you wanted to continue a Collection, say, “Books to Read,” in a new
notebook, but you don’t want to copy everything over, you can
thread it. If the first instance of the “Books to Read” Collection is on
this page in your second Bullet Journal, you would write “2.34” next
to the page number in your new notebook’s “Books to Read”
Collection. Here the “2” indicates the volume number of your Bullet
Journal and “34” represents the page number of the Collection in
that volume.
This notation also makes it easy for you to add threaded
notebooks to your Index. If you want to add content from a previous
notebook to your new notebook, all you have to do is add it to your
Index like this: Books to Read: (2.34), 13.
Over time your Index will double as a “table of context.” It provides
you with a bird's-eye view of how you're investing your time and
energy. It’s a map of all the things you’re saying yes to. Remember,
for everything you say yes to, you're also saying no to something
else. Yes means work, it means sacrifice, it means investing time
into one thing that you can no longer invest into another.
Use your Index to help you stay focused on the things
that are worthy of your yes.
MIGRATION
There is nothing quite so useless as doing with great efficiency something that should not
be done at all.
—PETER DRUCKER
T here are a lot of productivity systems that help us create lists,
but few encourage us to reengage with them. By hoarding tasks,
our lists quickly become endless and unmanageable, leaving us
feeling overwhelmed or demotivated. It's easy to forget that just
because something could be done does not mean that it should be
done.
Productivity is about getting more done by working
on fewer things.
We need to be vigilant about regularly curating our
Xommitments so that we can focus our time and energy on things
that actually matter. In BuJo, Migration helps us form this habit.
During Migration, we transfer content from one place in our
Bullet Journal to another by rewriting it. This may seem like a lot of
effort, but it serves a critical purpose: It weeds out distractions.
Because it takes a little bit more time to rewrite things by hand,
there's a built-in incentive to pause and consider each candidate. If
an entry isn't worth the few seconds of effort required to rewrite it,
then it's probably not that important. Get rid of it. Do you really
need to go to that event, run that errand, host that party, file that
report? Sometimes you do, but oftentimes you don't.
We pick up a lot of stowaways during the daily hustle. It's easier
to just accept tasks than it is to carefully evaluate them in the
moment. This is how empty responsibilities quickly accumulate,
leaching your mental resources for as long as you let them. By
rewriting your tasks, you have the opportunity to vet your
responsibilities and throw the useless ones overboard. Simply put,
Migration keeps you from operating on autopilot, wasting
tremendous amounts of time working on things that don't add value
to your life.
Monthly Migration
The main Migration happens at the end of every month, when
you're ready to set up a new Monthly Log (this page ). In the last
couple days of April, for example, you'd set up your new Monthly
Log for May. Once that's done, slowly scan all of the pages of the
past month, reviewing the state of your Tasks. Chances are you
haven't completed them all. This is totally normal. Transform any
guilt into curiosity by asking yourself why each Task might still be
incomplete. Does it matter? Is it vital? What would happen if you
didn't do it?
If you realize an incomplete Task has become irrelevant, strike it
out. Take a moment to enjoy the feeling of having reclaimed a
portion of your time. Give yourself some credit; this is a win! AII
wins—no matter how small—should merit at least a moment of
appreciation.
If a Task remains relevant, if it still adds value to your life, then
migrate it. You can migrate an item in three different ways:
1. Transcribe the open Task to the Tasks page of your new
Monthly Log (this page ). Then mark the old entry as migrated
€c »
.
>
2. Transcribe the Task into a Custom Collection (this page ). Then
mark the old entry as migrated “>”.
3. If the Task is date-specific and falls outside of the current
month—migrate it into your Future Log (this page ). Then
mark it as scheduled “<”.
MIGRATION
APRIL
Monthly Log Daily Logs Future Loo
MAY
Custom Loo Monthly Loo Future Loo
* For related info., like quotes, books to read, or project specifics etc.
TIP: When setting up your new Monthly Log, be sure to check your
Future Log. Are any tasks or events queued up for the coming
month? If so, migrate those entries from your Future Log into your
new Monthly Log’s Tasks or Calendar page.
TIP: If you're new to Bullet Journaling, your first Monthly
Migration can be a real lightbulb moment. This is where it all begins
to click. That's why I highly encourage new Bullet Journalists to
stick with Bullet Journaling for at least two to three months when
testing it out.
Yearly/Notebook Migration
At the beginning of every year, no matter where you are in your
current BuJo notebook, start a new one. This may seem wasteful,
but christening a new journal at the right time can be very
empowering and motivational. The new year is as good a time as
any to set up a new notebook, because it's an unavoidable cultural
milestone, both literally and metaphorically. It delineates the old
from the new, what has been from what could be. Why not welcome
this opportunity for a fresh start? It gives us an excuse to drop any
useless baggage weighing us down, lightening our load for the new
adventures to come.
When you get to the end of a notebook, or a year, review your
Index. Take stock of all the Collections that you've accumulated.
There you'll find a fairly accurate account of how you've been
spending your time and energy. Now's the time to make the hard
call. Do these Collections (and their open Tasks) get to accompany
you into your next Bullet Journal?
We honor the lessons we've learned by applying them to the next
phase of our life. Big or small, migrate only the content and
techniques that have proven themselves to be valuable, nothing
else. A new notebook is not about starting over—it's about leveling
up.
Migrating notebooks is a benevolent reckoning, where you face
your responsibilities to see what they've given you and what they've
taken away. Take a hard look at your journal, because there you'll
see your story unfolding, written in your own hand. Each Bullet
Journal becomes another volume in the story of your life. Does it
represent the life you want to live? If not, then leverage the lessons
you've learned to change the narrative in the next volume.
TIP: Weekly Log (#bulletjournalweeklylog): Some Bullet
Journalists like to migrate Bullets on a weekly rather than a
monthly cycle. I use Weekly Logs only when I have a lot on my
plate. I'm not wild about rewriting things either, so I only do it
when it helps me stay on top of my game. Others find weekly
migration useful when they don't have a lot going on, and they can
fit a whole week's worth of Tasks on a page or two. Again, it always
depends on what suits your needs. I like to keep my Weekly Log
simple, so I repurpose the Daily Log template, except the Topic is
the week's date range—say, "June 14-21."
Migrating Your Mental Inventory
To get a taste of Migration, you can use the Mental Inventory that
you created earlier to populate your notebook. Before you dive in,
review your Mental Inventory. Make sure everything you listed is
worth the time and energy it will take to rewrite it; to filter out the
meaningful from the meaningless.
Now decide what things you need to work on over the following
month. Those items will go into the Monthly Log's Tasks page.
Future Tasks and Events will go into your Future Log. Related
items, like books you want to read, will be organized into their own
Custom Collection.
Don't worry about getting everything right or perfect. Every
master starts by picking up a tool for the first time. This is just the
first step in a process that will continue to evolve as long as you
Bullet Journal. Be patient with yourself, and remember, do what
works for you .
THE LETTER
N ow you may be asking yourself, why would I bother doing all
this stuff? It’s a fair question. So before we get into the big why
behind Bullet Journaling itself, I want to share a letter from a Bullet
Journalist, who requested to remain anonymous, that exemplifies
just how impactful the system can be when integrated into your life.
Organization is only partly about crossing things off our list; it’s
also about becoming aware of what truly matters.
It’s a parent’s worst nightmare: standing by helplessly as your child struggles to
breathe. The EMTs rush into the room with their giant bags and a stretcher, firing
off stats and rapid questions to those nearby. The kid turns blue, eyes sliding shut.
They start CPR, and you watch as the little body jumps with each push on his chest.
This was the scene a week ago in my son’s preschool class. His eight classmates
all have health and developmental problems ranging from moderate to severe, and
the class exists to help them catch up with their peers. Among the ailments are
brain tumors, multiple sclerosis, cystic fibrosis, autism, and cancer in remission.
The little boy who stopped breathing had been acting a little funny earlier that day,
but was not feverish or sick—not five minutes earlier, he was happy and playing
alongside my son at the train table.
| looked away to help another kiddo find an orange crayon and then, all of a
sudden, shouting and semi-controlled chaos. Then 9-1-1. Then the EMTs. Then the
oxygen rushed out of the room and | think those of us parents and teachers on duty
collectively held our breaths as the rest of the children were herded off to
neighboring classrooms for safekeeping.
The mom on duty that day was the victim's mother. She was not calm. Her hands
shook almost to the point where she bobbled her entire purse while searching
through it. Tears rolled down her cheeks when the EMTs rushed in and removed her
boy's hand from hers so that they could work on him. Still, she had the presence of
mind to pull out a well-worn, thread-bound book that is quite familiar to me: It was
an orchid-colored, soft-covered Leuchtturm1917. The elastic was pulled down over
the bottom left corner, holding a pen to the spine. It was a Bullet Journal.
Grasping the last few pages, she shredded them away from the threaded spine
and held them out to the EMT asking her questions. She shook her head and
sobbed, “I can’t... I can’t...”
*| have a pulse," the other EMT announced, while the guy in charge looked over
the papers in astonishment. | sat down next to the mom and put my arm around her
shoulders. This could easily be my child on the floor, | thought. Any of our children
in this classroom.
The mom told him shakily what was on the paper: “His dosages and meds, his
specialists and file numbers, phone numbers, allergies." She sucked in a breath.
“Seizure log. There's a seizure log in there," she said. | squeezed her shoulders in
support; mine has seizures, too. She rattled off his birthday as they stabilized him
for transportation.
The EMT just shook his head and said to her, “Thank you. This is exactly what we
need to help him. | have to call this in." And he pulled out his phone to do just that,
rattling off vital information to whomever he was speaking with. She rode in the
ambulance with her son; | watched as they banged the back doors shut and sped
off, lights and sirens at full.
| hugged my son a little harder that night and then sat down and wrote a new
spread in my own journal with emergency information, medications and dosages, a
seizure log, phone numbers, file numbers, and an allergy list. Over the course of
this evening, | went through an entire box of tissues before I called her cell. *He's
okay," she told me. *The doctor said that the info the EMTs sent ahead allowed them
to act fast. He's going to be okay. He's okay," she repeated again, choked and
hoarse, but | could hear the gratefulness in her voice.
My son's friend has returned to school and carries a tiny oxygen cylinder in a tiny
oxygen cylinder backpack. He's adorably sad about having to carry it. But he's alive,
happy, and whole, which is all a parent can really ask for their children. l've also
noticed that the other parents are now carrying notebooks of their own, presumably
with the vitals necessary to help their kids in them.
No one thinks that the next child in the next ambulance could be theirs, or that
their elderly mother may have an emergency fall, or that after a car accident, one
may not be able to remember all of the vital information needed to treat their family
members safely in the hospital. But let's be honest here . . . we all know someone
who has needed that information recently. We all have passed the accident on the
highway. We all have had that momentary lapse in memory when asked something
about our or our children's medical records. Write it down. Keep it with you. Be
prepared to commit the ultimate BuJo sin and rip it out in an emergency situation.
You could save a life—your own, your child's, your sister's, your father's... Being
organized could be the difference between life and death.
SET UP YOUR BULLET JOURNAL
1: SET UP THE INDEX *
INDEX
e Number pages 1-4 Uie wd
e Title page "Index" Goals: 13-16
— Only add things to the Index that have content!
No empty Collections!
2: SET UP THE FUTURE LOG *
FUTURE LOG FUTURE LOG
e Number pages 5-8
Divide page into 6 cells
Label cells with next months
Jal
6
Add Future Tasks and Events
Add it to your Index
Mar
Aer
5
3: SET UP THE MONTHLY LOG
JANUARY JANUARY
e Number pages 9-10 Rees: CINE
i : * Plan Trig
e Title pages with current month bakiga
e List dates and monthly tasks * Dentist
e Add "9—' to your Index * Daycare
4: SET UP THE DAILY LOG
01.01.06 01.0710
* Donate Clothes * Tim: call
e Add page number o Promotedt * Yoga: cancel
e Add today’s date as the Topic X Back «p site - office closed Fri.
e Write down today's Tasks aa 4 Shi ai
* Book daycare
— Daily Logs don't get Indexed
USING YOUR MENTAL INVENTORY (OPTIONAL)
5: REVIEW MENTAL INVENTORY
e Cross out anything that isn't vital or important.
e Identify related content (i.e., goals, projects, shopping lists, etc.) to create Custom
Collections .**
6: MIGRATE MENTAL INVENTORY
e Move Future items into the Future Log
e Migrate Items into Monthly Log
e Prioritize Monthly Log
e Migrate Priorities into your Daily Log
e Migrate any additional items into Custom Collections **
"E ZH
Future Loo Monthly Loo Daily loo
**CUSTOM COLLECTIONS
We'll cover these at length in Part IV, but they're used to store related content like goals,
projects, or Focused lists. Set them up the same way (with topics and page numbers)
to add them to your Index.
Examples Include:
=E ELI EZ EL]
Goals Groceries Med Tracker Reading List
Ill
THE PRACTICE
THE PRACTICE
Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans.
—ALLEN SAUNDERS
N ow you have all the tools you need to use your Bullet Journal to
get organized. It's an important step toward assuming
responsibility for the precious little time and energy that we're
given. That said, organization can become a cleverly disguised form
of distraction.
You can spend hours crafting to-do lists without ever crossing off
a single thing. You may disappear down the rabbit hole of cleaning
your house while more important projects suffer. You can spend
days, months, even years working in highly organized ways toward
the wrong things (as I did with my Paintapic start-up). The
significance of what we're doing, or how we're doing it, pales in
comparison to why we're doing it in the first place.
Being busy doesn't necessarily mean were being
productive.
Being busy can be likened to tumbling down an existential
staircase: stimulus, reaction, stimulus, reaction. This frenetic cycle
of reactivity holds our attention hostage, limiting our ability to
recognize opportunities for love, growth, and purpose. These are the
things that add value to our lives, yet they're easily obscured by the
rush of our busy lives.
In order to become truly productive, we must first break this
cycle. We need to wedge a space between the things that happen to
us and the way that we react to them. In this space, we're granted an
opportunity to examine our experience. Here we can learn what's in
our control, what's meaningful, what's worth our attention, and
why . It's how we begin to define who we are and what we believe
in.
Realizations like these are an important step forward, but the
things we learn are simply thoughts. Like most thoughts, they fade
over time, especially if they remain abstract and don't play an active
role in our lives. Even the most fervent beliefs or helpful lessons
can dissipate unless they're actively applied. What if you could put
your beliefs into practice on a regular basis, test-driving promising
ideas and measuring their impact on your life when put into action?
In Part III, you'll discover how the Bullet Journal method can
serve as a bridge between your beliefs and your actions. Each
chapter will explore guiding philosophies from a variety of
traditions and teach you how to put them into practice with the help
of your notebook. Step by step, we'll close the distance between
what we're doing and why by defining how to live an intentional
life, one that's both productive and meaningful.
KEY CONCEPTS
You can't make time, you can only take time.
Happiness is the by-product of meaning.
In order to be happy, you have to figure out what is meaningful. You
figure out what is meaningful by putting in the time to. . . X
Cultivate your curiosity through setting goals. E odds: ut
We accomplish our goals by breaking them down into small pieces E X
because...
Small questions and small solutions lead to big change over
time.
Productivity is about sustainable improvement.
In order to achieve that you have to. . .
Look inward to reveal a way forward.
Dedicate specific times for reflecting on the
contents of your notebook. Prioritize what matters,
discard what doesnt.
Failure is guaranteed if you never begin.
If you try and fail, you fail once. If you compromise and fail, you fail twice as hard
because you know you didn't try. All you have to do is. . .
Better > Perfect
“The obstacle
is the way.”
— Ryan Holiday
The only thing you can control is the way you respond. O A
Focusing on things you can't control allows them to control
you. Focus on what you can control. O b
Oc
To be useful, you must become useful, especially to yourself.
You can’t improve the world around you if you can’t improve the world within. Choose
your friends wisely, and be a friend to yourself. To start this process. . .
Study the good in your life. 6AATITUD£
6
Achievement is empty without appreciation. If you can’t - Promotion RATITUDE
appreciate your hard work, what's the point?! I a c
It's important to. . . Naa late de
* Created new job
= Clean house
Find the music in the mundane.
When you believe in what you're doing, pain is transformed by purpose.
d
BEGINNING
Many painters are afraid of the blank canvas, but the blank canvas is afraid of the
painter who dares and who has broken the spell of “you can't" once and for all.
—VINCENT VAN GOGH
o dare in life is to make yourself vulnerable to the possibility of
failure. Most of us don't welcome failure. So instead we avoid
taking risks. We compromise, taking cold comfort in the
assumption that we've removed the possibility of failure as we
buckle up in the passenger seat and let life take the wheel.
The truth is, there's no avoiding failure. While failure may never
feel good, failure in a life of compromise can be twice as
devastating. Let's say you didn't take that exciting job overseas
because it was easier to stay where you were. Then, out of nowhere,
you lose your comfortable job. Now you have to contend with the
loss of two jobs—one of which could have been a transformational
experience. You'll never know, but chances are you'll never stop
wondering what might have been.
Don’t let fear dilute your life. Take, for example, Heather Caliri,
who had struggled with performance anxiety since childhood. It
hijacked her joy and her courage to try new things, take risks, and
enjoy the things she loved most. There was no more obvious or
bewildering example of this than her love of reading.
After having kids, she found less and less time to indulge her
simple joy of sitting down with a book. She realized that
performance anxiety had spread into her reading habits. She felt as
if she didn't read enough, widely enough, or the right kinds of
books. The more self-conscious she became about her reading
habits, the harder it was for her to make time to read.
When she started Bullet Journaling, she was surprised at how
motivating it was to “X” off boxes and how much she enjoyed the
creativity of representing her daily life in beautiful ways in her
notebook. Still, she hesitated to track her reading. It'll only make me
more anxious and aware that I'm not reading enough , she thought.
When she finally created a “Books Read" Collection, she was
shocked to find that the opposite was true. She read a lot. The issue
wasn't that she lacked motivation; it was that she walled herself off
from trying, lest she fail.
Heather formed the habit of giving herself more credit for her
efforts. The more she read, the more she felt at ease with herself.
She began feeling the joy, excitement, and eagerness to read that
she'd missed for years. Her Bullet Journal helped her to systematize
her reading to overcome the barriers she'd felt. When we grant
ourselves the opportunity to be rewarded by our courage, powerful
things can happen.
There never has been, nor will there ever be, another like you.
Your singular perspective may patch some small hole in the vast
tattered fabric of humanity. Uniqueness alone, however, does not
make you valuable. If you don't do , if you don't dare , then you rob
the world—and yourself—of the chance to contribute something
meaningful. As the French film director Robert Bresson once said,
“Make visible what, without you, might perhaps never have been
seen." 2: If you don't try something, it will assuredly never exist. Not
your version, anyway. True, not all endeavors will be successful, but
even our so-called failures can be valuable teachers.
We must take it upon ourselves to grow. We grow by learning,
and we learn by daring to take action. There will always be risk,
because we can't control the outcome. This is the way of life, and it's
unavoidable. What is avoidable, however, is being perpetually
haunted by all the things that could have been if you had only dared.
Begin by giving yourself permission to believe you're worth the risk.
IN PRACTICE
Sometimes the hardest part of getting started is knowing where to
begin. Maybe you just don't know how to start tackling your goals,
your projects, your tasks, or even getting organized. Maybe you're
afraid that you'll get it wrong or that you'll disappoint yourself. If
that's the case, an easy place to begin is to get into the habit of
simply capturing your thoughts on paper.
Start by taking notes on this book in your Bullet Journal. We will
cover a lot of different ideas in Part III. I hope that some of the
material will inspire new thoughts or provide information you find
useful. Don't let it get away. Write it down.
Create a "Bullet Journal Method" Collection in your notebook. As
you read, Rapid Log whatever comes to mind using the Bullets you
learned about in Part II. Keep recording your thoughts as you make
your way through the chapters, and you'll ease yourself into the
system. Then figure out what you need next. Perhaps you'll add the
Index, so you can find your Notes later on to refresh your memory.
Thoughts are the source of our goals, hopes, dreams, and
ultimately our actions. An easy place to start with any endeavor is
simply taking your thoughts out of your head and organizing them
on paper. In so doing, you've already crossed the starting line to
realize that it's just another moment. The only difference is that
now you're behind the steering wheel.
REFLECTION
Know thyself.
—SOCRATES
W nat led you to open this book? What series of events led you
here? Were you just browsing the shelf? Are you reading this
because it was a gift and you don't want to hurt the gifter's feelings?
(If that's the case, thank you for making it this far!) Or was there
something missing you were hoping to find here? If so, how would
you define that missing piece? How has it affected your life?
Chances are these questions kicked up some dirt inside. It goes to
show that no matter how simple an act may appear, it bears the
legacy of countless bygone choices.
One of my favorite sculptures is called The Thinker by Auguste
Rodin. It's the one with the naked guy sitting on a block, resting his
head on his hand, you know, thinking. Like a lot of Rodin's work, it
feels unfinished. Some surfaces appear rough; others lack detail.
The visibility of these millions of minute choices imparts
immediacy and humanity to his work—it's as though we can see the
artist himself thinking.
Like a block of marble, our lives are finite. They start out rough
and formless. Each choice we make places a chisel to the stone.
Each action irreversibly chips away time. No action is so
insignificant that it can't benefit from our attention. It's the lack of
attention that's often responsible for the rubble of cringeworthy
decisions weighing on our conscience.
To be sure, making bad decisions, no matter how smart or wise
you are, is an unavoidable part of being human. Life is also an
unruly medium. It slips, it shatters, it shifts, it crushes. Sometimes
we even find ourselves on the receiving end of the chisel. It leaves
us all rough around the edges. The beautiful thing is, as long as
you're still alive, there is always material left to work with. Like The
Thinker , your life doesn't have to be big, polished, or perfect to be
beautiful. That said, we can do better.
Many poor decisions are born in the vacuum of self-awareness.
We get so caught up in the doing of things that we forget to ask why
we're doing them in the first place. Asking why is the first small but
deliberate step we can take in the search for meaning.
The search for meaning often begins later than it needs to.
Because it seems like such a monumental or esoteric undertaking,
we tend to avoid this form of inquiry until it's forced on us by some
shade of crisis or circumstance. Exploring our why from these dim
places leaves us at a disadvantage. Our ability to see and think
clearly is shrouded by our suffering. Soul-searching doesn't need to
be confined to the dark seasons of our lives. It can be a gentle part
of our everyday. It all begins with becoming mindful of how we're
investing our time and energy—the things our Bullet Journal is
faithfully recording for our reference.
You may be thinking, Analyzing my to-do list isn't going to
answer life's big questions . Maybe, or maybe it's because we're
untrained in the art of asking these types of questions. To
understand the big intimidating whys (What is the meaning of life?
Why am I here? ), we start by asking the small whys : Why am I
working on this project? Why is my partner irritating me? Why am
I feeling stressed? In the Bullet Journal, we do this through the
practice of Reflection.
Reflection is the nursery of intentionality. It grants us the
protected mental environment we need to reclaim some much-
needed perspective and begin to ask why . Through Reflection, we
cultivate the habit of checking in with ourselves to examine our
progress, our responsibilities, our circumstances, and our state of
mind. It helps us see if we're solving the right problems, answering
the right questions. It's by questioning our experience that we begin
to sort the wheat from the chaff—the why from the what .
Don't worry, Reflection is not an invitation to flagellate yourself
for past failures. It's an opportunity to harvest the rich information
embedded in your lived experience and use it to fertilize your
future.
Reflection helps identify what nourishes you so you
can make better decisions as you seed the next season
of your life.
Our lives are lived in seasons of more, seasons of less, seasons of
triumph, seasons of loss. Each season sees our needs change. We
live, learn, and adapt. So, too, must our definition of meaning.
Things that grow in one season rot in another. If we blindly hold on
to the past, we'll be forced to sustain ourselves with the expiring
beliefs from seasons gone by. No wonder we're often left feeling
unsatisfied, empty, starving for substance.
In order to live fulfilling lives, we have to embrace the shifting
nature of our experience by making our search for meaning an
ongoing practice. This is why the Bullet Journal method has
multiple Reflection mechanisms built right in. This is where the
method shifts from a system into a practice by helping us
continually chip away at what is unnecessary to reveal what is
meaningful.
IN PRACTICE
Maybe you're thinking, Ryder, I want to be a more reflective
person, but I never have time. I need to be in the right headspace to
think deep thoughts. My thoughts are all over the place, and so am
I.
If you're Bullet Journaling, then you've already begun. By
keeping different types of logs, you're not only organizing your
responsibilities, you're also documenting your thoughts and actions.
It's a passive form of reflection! All you need to do now is transition
at your own pace from passive reflection to active reflection.
REACTIVITY
FEAR
ANXIETY | REACTION
INTENTIONALITY
REELECTION
STIMULUS RESPONSE
CHOICE
AGENCY
PURPOSE
Daily Reflection
Throughout the day, you’re using your Daily Log (this page ) to
simply capture your thoughts. Now it’s just a matter of coming back
to them. That’s what Daily Reflection is designed for. It allows you
to bookend each day with two dedicated times of active
introspection.
AM Reflection: A Time to Plan
In the morning, or before you dive into your day, take a few
moments to sit down with your Bullet Journal. If you’re one of
those people who wakes with a mind swelling with thoughts, now’s
the time to relieve that pressure. Offload anything that’s bubbled up
overnight. Clear your mind to make room for the day ahead. For
those of you breakfast zombies, the AM Reflection helps get the
gears turning.
Next, review all the pages of the current month to remind
yourself of any open Tasks. This helps you focus and clarify your
priorities and plan accordingly. You'll step into your day with
confidence, clarity, and direction.
PM Reflection: A Time to Review
Where the AM Reflection favors planning to gear up for your day,
the PM Reflection leans toward review to help you unwind. Before
you go to bed, sit down with your Bullet Journal and scan what
you've logged throughout the day. Mark completed Tasks with an
"X." If a Task is missing, write it down. Again, you're unburdening
your mind.
Once your journal is updated, bring your attention to each item
individually. Here's where you begin to ask: Why is this important?
Why am I doing this? Why is this a priority? And so on. This will
help you surface distractions. Strike out the Tasks you've deemed to
be irrelevant.
Finally, take a moment to appreciate your progress. Acknowledge
the simple ways in which you've won the day. The PM Reflection
can be a wonderful way to decompress before you sleep, relieving
stress and anxiety through a sense of progress, preparedness, and
purpose.
TIP: You can use your Daily Reflection as your daily digital detox
window. After your PM Reflection, implement a "screens off" policy
that lasts until you've completed your AM Reflection the following
morning. It's a simple way to get yourself into the habit of
unplugging.
Monthly and Yearly Reflection Through Migration
Technology is always moving us toward a more seamless existence.
The less friction, the better. That's great when you're ordering pizza.
You don't really need to understand all the miraculous tech that
allows that hot cheesy goodness to appear out of thin air at your
doorstep. Convenience, however, often comes at the expense of
understanding. The less time you spend examining things, the less
you know about them. When it comes to understanding how you
spend your life, it’s important to slow down and take the time.
Migration is designed to add the friction you need to slow down,
step back, and consider the things you task yourself with. On the
surface it's an automatic filtering mechanism, designed to leverage
your limited patience. If something is not worth the few seconds it
takes to rewrite it, then chances are it's really not important. In
addition, handwriting triggers our critical thinking, helping us draw
new connections between thoughts. As you migrate each item, you
give yourself a chance to identify unconventional relationships or
opportunities by holding each item under the microscope of your
attention.
For everything we say yes to, we're saying no to something else.
Migration gives you an opportunity to recommit to what matters
and let go of what does not. As Bruce Lee once said, *It is not daily
increase but daily decrease; hack away the unessential."
BULLET JOURNAL REFLECTION CYCLES
YEARLY
MIGRATION
MONTHLY
MIGRATION
DAILY
AI P
REELECTION
Consistency
I'm often asked how much time I spend on Daily Reflection. On
average, I usually devote 5 to 15 minutes per session. It's not about
how much time it takes; it's about being consistent. If you find
yourself failing to check in for Reflection, reduce the amount of
time you spend. Take as much or as little time as you need to make
it part of your daily routine.
The goal is getting into the habit of checking in with yourself,
asking small whys . Over time, you get better at answering these
questions. You're refining your beliefs, your values, your ability to
spot your weaknesses and your strengths. Slowly but surely you
start to weed out distractions, which results in you steadily
becoming more present and aware.
Awareness
In his beautiful commencement speech “This Is Water,” at Kenyon
College, author David Foster Wallace talked about the day-to-day
and how “the so-called ‘real world’ will not discourage you from
operating on your own default settings, because the so-called ‘real
world' of men and money and power hums along quite nicely on the
fuel of fear and contempt and frustration and craving and the
worship of self.” 22
He's talking about how, if we're not careful, we can start to go on
autopilot, which can greatly diminish our experience of the world.
During Reflection, we get in the habit of switching off our autopilot
by examining our experience. This form of inquiry requires us to
ask questions and not take things at face value. It encourages us
how to think about ourselves and the world in a more considered
way.
Through consistently engaging with our experience, we become
aware that even the dullest moment can have a hidden depth. As
you cultivate your awareness, “it will actually be within your power
to experience a crowded, hot, slow, consumer-hell-type situation as
not only meaningful, but sacred, on fire with the same force that lit
the stars—compassion, love, the subsurface unity of all things." 23
Summary
When you go to the optometrist, you're asked to read symbols off a
chart through a large metal device filled with lenses known as a
phoropter. As you read, the optometrist switches lenses, asking you
which brings the symbols into focus. Is it better now? Click. How
about now? Click. The purpose is to find an array of lenses that
alters the way light hits our retinas so that we may see with greater
clarity.
When it comes to living a more intentional life, Reflection
functions as a phoropter. It's the mechanism that helps improve our
perception, but in order for it to work properly, we need to add the
lenses. It's likely you already have some of your own, like your
values and your beliefs. Reflection, however, is a rich and ancient
practice. Each tradition offers its own lens through which we can
correct our shortsightedness and sharpen our insight when we
reflect. In the chapters that follow, I'll introduce you to the lenses
I've found most useful. Let's explore these lenses designed to help
us pull our life into greater focus.
MEANING
Eyes see only light, ears hear only sound, but a listening heart perceives meaning.
—DAVID STEINDL -RAST
M y favorite Twilight Zone episode is called “A Nice Place to Visit.”
It follows the story of a Mr. Valentine, a scrappy burglar
gunned down by the police during a robbery, who is guided into the
afterlife by an affable Englishman in a crisp white suit. To
Valentine’s surprise, he’s ushered into luxury: an opulent New York
penthouse, closets stocked with bespoke suits, bars brimming with
the finest liquor. He showboats around town in fancy cars and wins
game after game at the casinos surrounded by smitten socialites.
Money, power, sex appeal—everything he ever wanted—finally his.
In time, though, the novelty fades. His joy withers to boredom.
This perfect, longed-for existence reveals itself to be entirely
unfulfilling. Valentine turns to his guide and says, “I don’t think
heaven is for me. I think I belong in the other place.” Whereupon
his guide wryly responds, “What makes you think this is heaven?”
Success often feels surprisingly empty. That holds true not just
for financial success, but for the kind of self-improvement we’ve
always thought to be healthy and good. In the article “How I'm
Overcoming My Obsession with Constant Self-Improvement," Leo
Babauta, the creator of the blog Zen Habits , writes about how he
ran an ultramarathon, participated in the Goruck Challenge (a ten-
hour obstacle course where you must wear a brick-filled backpack),
and learned how to code, only to find that his life wasn't any better.
“The fantasy was never real," he writes. ?* He is not alone in this
realization.
The world is more literate, well-fed, vaccinated, and
technologically advanced than ever. A hunger for more, however, is
prompting millennials to spend nearly twice as much per month on
self-improvement as Boomers (despite earning about half as much
as the elder generation). ?» Which raises another question: How do
we reconcile this trend with the escalating rates of depression?
American youths suffering from severe depression increased from
5.9 percent in 2012 to 8.2 percent in 2015. 2° In the United States
alone, anxiety disorders affect 40 million adults—that's 18.1 percent
of the population. 27
You might be thinking that getting fit and taking night classes are
totally worthwhile goals. Maybe, but the impact of what you're
doing is contingent on why you're doing it. The key is
understanding the motivation underlying your hard work.
Our efforts are always fueled by some promise. What exactly do
you expect in exchange for your blood, sweat, and tears? What is the
goal behind all of our goals? For most of us, it's to be happy, and
therein lies the problem.
Think back to the last goal you achieved. You pushed yourself
hard, drawn by the potential and promise of a happier life. But when
you finally crossed the finish line, what did you find? Did that raise,
that new house, that car, that vacation, make you feel the way you
hoped it would? Chances are the answer is no—or not for long,
anyway. Why is that?
We can begin to untangle this conundrum by accepting a simple
truth: None of us can know with any true certainty what will make
us happy. In fact, it turns out that we're pretty lousy at guessing
how something will make us feel, thanks to a phenomenon known
as impact bias: "the tendency for people to overestimate the length
or the intensity of future feeling states.” 28 In essence, we
chronically underestimate our ability to adapt.
As we race toward our goals, we learn new things, and our
circumstances change. By the time we arrive at the finish line, we're
simply different people. The best we can do is guess what will make
us happy. So we place blind bets, gambling away our money, our
time, and our sanity in the pursuit of happiness. It seems the harder
we try to be happy, the more elusive happiness becomes. As
comedian Tim Minchin once quipped, *Happiness is like an orgasm:
If you think about it too much, it will go away.” 2°
Speaking of which, our built-in drive for pleasure is another
critical factor in understanding the enigmatic nature of happiness.
We're built to adapt to heat, to cold, to hardship, and this is partially
a result of our ability to experience pleasure. Pleasure allowed us to
quickly discern good from bad, harmful from helpful. We like things
that feel good, and we'll go out of our way for more of the good
stuff, like shelter, sustenance, water.
In the bad old days, when we spent most of our time, you know,
trying not to die, pleasure was limited and practical. Nowadays it's a
commodity, marketed as a substitute for happiness, and it's on
demand.
Thanks to our ability to rapidly adapt, even the most pleasurable
experience or purchase quickly becomes the boring new normal.
Soon we're itching for another quick fix of pleasure. No longer
satisfied with what we already have, we treat our withdrawal pains
by incrementally upping the dosage. More shoes, more booze, more
sex, more food, more “likes,” just more . This phenomenon is
known as hedonic adaptation.
Exploiting what Sean Parker, founding member of Facebook,
called this *vulnerability in human psychology" is the bread and
butter of our economy. ?? Notice how much advertising focuses not
on “good” but on “more”: better, faster, fresher, stronger, lighter.
“Good” is enough, but “better” is a promise of “happiness” that's
just another transaction away.
What can be bought can be owned. That is the social contract.
You buy shoes at the shoe store, clothes at the clothing store, cars at
the dealership, and so on. Notice that there is no happiness store.
It's not because it can't be bought; it's because happiness can't be
owned.
Happiness, like sadness, comes and goes. It's an emotion, and
like all emotions, it's blessedly temporary. Imagine a world in which
our emotions calcified, forcing us to entertain our demons
indefinitely. Or Valentine's heaven/hell, where things are so perfect,
so lacking in contrast, that everything ultimately feels meaningless.
It would poison us. In fact, we often define the inability to
transition between emotional states as mental illness. Seen in this
light, seeking some mythical state of perpetual happiness not only
collides with reality, but seems undesirable.
So are all our goals, all our striving, ultimately pointless? Not in
the least. It means that happiness itself can't be the goal. Clearly
happiness is important, so the question becomes: How do we lure it
into our lives?
When you look up the term, you'll find more than a dozen
synonyms, demonstrating how complex and nuanced the experience
can be, but none volunteers a way for us to be happy. This is the
domain of philosophy, which, despite its stuffy reputation, was
conceived to help us live better lives. One such philosophy is Greek
eudaimonism, *a moral philosophy that defines right action as that
which leads to the ‘well-being’ of the individual.” 3+ This idea of
contented well-being as simply a by-product of personal industry is
a recurring theme in a variety of philosophical traditions around the
world. In other words, happiness is the result of our actions directed
toward other goals.
If happiness is the result of our actions, then we need
to stop asking ourselves how to be happy . Rather,
we should be asking ourselves how to be .
The people of Okinawa, Japan, for example, are among the
happiest and longest-lived populations, with the world's highest
ratios of centenarians at approximately 50 per 100,000. 32 When
asked what their secret to happiness was, a common answer was
ikigai . “Your ikigai is at the intersection of what you are good at
and what you love doing,” says author Héctor García. He writes,
“Just as humans have lusted after objects and money since the
dawn of time, other humans have felt dissatisfaction at the
relentless pursuit of money and fame and have instead focused on
something bigger than their own material wealth. This has over the
years been described using many different words and practices, but
always hearkening back to the central core of meaningfulness in
life." 33
Maybe we have it all backward. It seems that in our pursuit of
happiness, we're taking our focus off of what could be meaningful.
But it's in the pursuit of what is meaningful that happiness seems
most likely to appear. As Viktor Frankl put it, “Happiness cannot be
pursued, it can only ensue.” 34
The question becomes: What is meaningful? Many of us aren't
sure, and that's okay. It's a profoundly complicated question that's
been giving us headaches as long as we've had the heads to think
about it. Academic definitions are vague by necessity to encompass
the many subjective views of what's meaningful. We have
experienced firsthand how our subjective definition of what is
meaningful changes over time. Do you still treasure the same things
as your twelve-year-old self? Probably not. What is clear is that
there is no single meaning to life; there are many.
From service to faith to family to contribution, people are happy
to volunteer all sorts of avenues toward meaning. Yes, they're all
worthy, but it doesn't necessarily mean that you will find them
fulfilling. I've met plenty of disillusioned volunteers, social workers,
teachers, doctors, and even parents. They know that what they're
doing is objectively meaningful, yet they just don't feel it.
What does feeling have to do with meaning? Arguably
everything. There is no intellectualizing what resonates with you,
and that's why it's so hard to define. When it reveals itself, you feel
it. The Greeks had a term for this—phainesthai —which has been
roughly translated at different times to “showing itself," “that which
reveals itself,” “shining forth,” and “to appear." 35
Your senses will witness what “shines forth,” that
which holds the promise of meaning.
If we live passive lives, ones where we don't pursue what shines
forth, we remain in the dark, largely ignorant as to our place in the
world. In this state, our efforts, no matter how well intentioned or
noble, will often feel meaningless because they seem to serve no
purpose. We try and fail to fill that void with things, which does
little more than weigh us down even further. That's why it's vital to
seek out what shines forth for you.
How do we uncover what "shines forth"? Just as we all have a
built-in mechanism for seeing, we also have a built-in mechanism
for sensing the luminous things that call to us: our curiosity.
Our curiosity is the exciting electricity we feel in the presence of
potential. It sparks our imagination and wonder, drawing us out of
ourselves and into the world. It's a magnetism that often supersedes
reason, greed, personal gain, and even happiness. You've already
experienced this in some form, be it attraction to a person,
fascination with a topic, or the thrill of working on something you
enjoy. Your curiosity can also be drawn toward things that you
haven't experienced yet. Maybe it's the idea of raising a family,
starting a company, making an album, or addressing a particular
problem in the world. Whatever they may be, these are the things
your heart has identified as potentially meaningful. The question is:
Have you ever granted yourself a moment to define what exactly
these things are?
Let's zoom way out. Before you join that gym, enroll in those
classes, buy that TV, or even set goals, it helps to have some basic
big-picture awareness that guides your actions. You need to take the
time to articulate your vision for what it means to live a meaningful
life based on your felt experience. If you don't orient yourself this
way, you can lose yourself in *the other place," far removed from
the things you care about. So let's start by figuring out what kind of
life you want to lead, beginning with the following exercises.
IN PRACTICE
A TALE OF TWO LIVES
This thought experiment was inspired by the poem *The Road Not
Taken" by Robert Frost. Imagine you are a traveler who arrives at a
fork in the road. On one side is the well-worn path. On the other
you find the path less traveled.
THE WELL-WORN PATH
This path leads you toward the familiar. It favors comfort over risk.
It is a continuation of your current life. You simply move along in
whatever pursuits are comfortable for you, putting little effort into
changing your lesser qualities or striving for improvement. At the
end of this life, what will you have accomplished, personally and
professionally? What are the consequences of this life?
THE PATH LESS TRAVELED
This path leads you into the unfamiliar. It's a life that favors risk
over comfort. You dare to pursue the things that interest you and
actively work to improve yourself. At the end of this life, what will
you have accomplished, personally and professionally? What are the
consequences of this life?
Now (bear with me), for each path , take 15 minutes or more to
write your obituary based on having taken that path. Create a "Two
Lives" Collection and add it to your Index. Start with one spread for
one path. Set up the second spread only when you've completed the
first. Fill as many pages as you need. Dig deep. Be honest. This is for
your eyes only. What do you see as you look far down each path?
Postmortem
1. Read through both obituaries. On the next page in your
notebook, write yourself a letter. What realizations, emotions,
questions, positives, or negatives came up during the exercise?
What surprised you? What saddened or scared you? What
N
excited you? The point is to capture how you feel about seeing
your whole life flash before your eyes. Phrase it in a way to
remind your future self—the one who will be reading this later
—what shifted, because something definitely will. Remind
yourself what you're trying to get away from, and where you
want to go.
. Select the life you liked best, and identify and circle the
accomplishments that you're most proud of. Once you're done,
migrate (this page ) these items into a “Goals” Collection (this
page ). Just like that, you've taken your first step toward
realizing a more meaningful life on your own terms. Let's keep
going!
GOALS
We can do no great things; only small things with great love.
—MOTHER TERESA
C uriosity points the needle of our inner compass toward the
hopeful magnetism of possibility and meaning. It's the force that
compels us to venture out of our comfort zone into unfamiliar
territory filled with uncertainty and risks. The question becomes:
How do we best harness our curiosity while reducing the risk of
failure? We set goals. When set with intention, goals can provide
structure, direction, focus, and purpose.
Goals give us the opportunity to define what we want.
When not set with intention, goals can be knee-jerk reactions to
something ugly or painful in our lives. If you're feeling overweight,
for example, dedicating yourself to running a marathon that's a few
months away is a reactionary goal—and likely a counterproductive
one. Your chances of achieving that goal are slim, but the chances of
hurting or disappointing yourself are high. When setting reactionary
goals, you're likely to find yourself right back where you started:
high risk, low reward.
Appropriating other peoples' goals is another common pitfall.
“Make a million dollars," for example, is the kind of goal we hear
bandied about, but it’s not a meaningful one. Why? Because it
serves no purpose; it's empty calories. Your goals need real
substance in order to be sustainable. You need to understand
exactly why you need a million dollars.
Your goals should be inspired by your felt experience. Surely you
have sources of real passion in your life—whether the positive
impetus of what brings you joy or painful lessons from the school of
hard knocks. Put them to work! Both are powerful wells from which
you can draw meaningful goals.
With that in mind, let's try again to set that big-money goal: “I
want to make enough money to pay off my student loans, buy a two-
bedroom house for my parents to retire in, and cover my kids'
education."
This goal, by contrast—though still ambitious—has meaningful
parameters. You know exactly how it would impact your life for the
better. This is critical, because big goals take time and sustained
effort to complete. Of all the challenges you'll face along the way,
endurance often proves to be the most cunning and lethal
adversary. Big goals therefore must be fueled by an authentic need
that will help you weather the days, months, or even years it takes
to fulfill them. That need must be strong enough to fortify you
against the siren songs of distraction, excuses, and doubt that will
beckon you toward the rocks. Angela Lee Duckworth, PhD, author
of Grit , found that “perseverance and passion for long-term goals"
indicated success “better than any other predictor." °°
For some of us, perseverance and passion conjure images of no-
pain-no-gain athletes scoring game-winning points or sticking
landings on fractured limbs, eccentric creatives sacrificing all for art
as they shiver in icy garrets, or monks spending decades meditating
in silence. But passion and perseverance, like all emotional
qualities, live on a spectrum. In an “all-or-nothing” world, we tend
to forget the power of something . The mightiest tree sprouts from a
vulnerable seed. The seed of passion is curiosity. The seed of
perseverance is patience. By designing your goals strategically, you
can begin to cultivate your opportunities by seeding both your
patience and curiosity.
IN PRACTICE
CREATE A GOALS COLLECTION
Our ambitions often suffer from being little more than vague
notions or abstract daydreams swimming around in our heads: *One
day, Ill . . ." Let's start by capturing our ideas on paper so we can
transform them into actionable goals.
If you haven't done so already, create a Goals Collection in your
Bullet Journal on the next blank spread. Big or small, just write
them down here so you have them clearly contained in one reusable
place. In doing so you've already taken the first important step to
realizing them.
This Collection serves as a menu of sorts, listing your potential
futures. It can keep you focused and motivated, but even the
greatest menu is useless if you don't order. The next step is to start
nudging yourself toward action. Otherwise it's easy to hoard goals,
waiting for just the right moment to get started. That moment will
never come. We have to create our own opportunities, because life
doesn't wait.
THE 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 EXERCISE
A great way to get motivated is by realizing just how limited your
time really is. The 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 exercise is designed to help you
contextualize your goals in terms of time. It will quantify your
objectives by breaking them down over the short, mid, and long
term. If you’re struggling to tackle your goals, give this a try.
First, turn to your next blank spread. The Topic for this new
Collection will be “5, 4, 3, 2, 1.” Divide the spread into five rows on
each page (this page ). The left page will be for your personal goals;
the right page will be for your professional goals. The top cell will
store the goals you want to accomplish in 5 years . In the next cell
you'll have goals you want to achieve in 4 months ; the next cell will
be for goals to achieve in 3 weeks ; the next cell will be for goals to
attain in 2 days ; and the final cell will be for goals you intend to
accomplish in the next 1 hour .
Now turn back to your *Goals" Collection and migrate your goals
into their appropriate cells. It does not have to line up exactly, but
the idea is to start the process by defining the amount of time and
energy (perseverance and passion) your goals require, both
individually and as a whole. It will provide some much needed
context.
5,4, 3, 2, 1 —PERSONAL
5 YEARS
* Start a family
* Own a property
X * Fluency in another language
4 MONTHS
XY ° Travel to Hawaii
* Lose 10 pounds
* Visit Niclas
3 WEEKS
* Donate clothes
* Volunteer
2 DAYS
* Clean out closet
* Clean kitchen
XY * Get driver's license renewed
1 HOUR
* Clean fridge
XY ° Call parents
* Make reservation for Leah dinner
PRIORITIZE YOUR GOALS
Once you've plotted out your goals, consider them individually. Are
they worth the amount of time you think they will take? If not,
cross them off. Prioritize the remaining items. Which ones really
resonate with your experience? Which ones shine forth brighter
than the others? Mark them with the priority Signifier “*”.
If you're implementing the 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 exercise, you may only
prioritize one goal in each cell (this page ). Personal and
professional pages should be graded separately, leaving you with ten
priorities total.
Add your four short-term goals (those in the hour and day cells)
to your Daily Log and set them as priorities with a **" Signifier.
Knock them out first to build the momentum you need to tackle
your bigger goals. That takes care of four of your ten goals! The
remaining goals all get their own separate Collection; for example,
"Travel to Hawaii" or “Gain fluency in another language.”
If you hesitate to create six new Collections (three personal,
three professional), perhaps it's an indicator that some of your goals
aren't as important as you thought. That's okay, strike them out. It's
not about how many goals you have. It's about working on what
matters.
FOCUS ON YOUR PRIORITIES
Once your Collections are set up, take a moment to promise
yourself not to revisit your *Goals" or *5, 4, 3, 2, 1" Collections until
the ones you picked are either complete or have become irrelevant.
If you're an ambitious person, a list of potential projects can be very
distracting. The thought of beginning something new can be
alluring, especially if what you're currently working on is dragging
out. Resist! Living intentionally is about focusing on what's most
important now. Keep this in mind when picking your goals: What do
you want to put into your life now—and, more importantly, why ?
We want to be working on the fewest number of things possible.
What?! Wouldn't it be more effective to be multitasking? No, we
want to keep multitasking to an absolute minimum. Why? Studies
suggest that only around 2 percent of the population is
psychologically able to multitask. 37 The rest of us aren't
multitasking; we're simply juggling. We're not working on things
simultaneously; we're actually micro-tasking: rapidly switching
between tasks—struggling not to drop the balls.
When you leave a Task unfinished and move quickly onto
something else, you leave part of your attention behind you, stuck
to that project you were just working on. University of Minnesota
professor Sophie Leroy, PhD, calls this “attention residue." She
writes that “people need to stop thinking about one task in order to
fully transition their attention and perform well on another. Yet,
results indicate it is difficult for people to transition their attention
away from an unfinished task and their subsequent task
performance suffers.” 32 In other words, the more thinly you slice
your attention and time, the less focused you become. The less
focused you become, the less progress you make. This is why you
may feel like you're not getting a lot done even though you're “super
busy."
Attend to your core priorities. Use them as a barrier to prevent
other distractions from leaking in. Go through them systematically,
focusing as much attention as possible on one thing at a time. Give
your goals the opportunity they deserve to reveal their lessons by
focusing on the process. It's arguably the process, rather than the
goals themselves, that will prove to be most valuable. The process
accounts for the majority of the experience and therefore provides
the bulk of the information that will help you grow.
BREAK DOWN YOUR GOALS INTO SPRINTS
When I was very young, all I wanted to do in life was to be a stop-
motion animator. I grew up endlessly rewatching movies inspired
by the Arabian Nights and Greek myths, featuring fantastic
creatures designed by Ray Harryhausen. That, I told myself, was
what I wanted to do, no question, no doubt . . . until I did it.
I eventually shot a short stop-motion piece with a friend. It
turned out reasonably well for a movie with the whopping budget of
frozen pizza and some clay. I learned a lot working on that project,
but most importantly I learned that pursuing this career would
leave me one fry short of a Happy Meal. Sure, the realization was a
bit heartbreaking, but it was also a relief. It freed me to explore
other things. Now I never look back and wonder what might have
been.
Not all things we're into are meant to be our occupation. That in
itself is a valuable lesson to learn, especially when you're young. It's
important to figure out what role the things that interest you play in
your life. Not every hobby or curiosity is a calling, but some are. We
figure that out by safely trying them on for size for a short period of
time before making a major commitment. Note that I tried out stop-
motion animation in a small way, on a short-term project, before
committing myself to a major goal like applying to an animation
program at a film school.
Breaking down long-term goals into smaller, self-contained goals
can turn what seems like a marathon into a series of Sprints. Sprints
cover the same ground, just in shorter, more manageable intervals.
This technique is a slightly adapted variation of a similar approach
deployed in agile software development, but it can be powerful for
tackling any type of goal. 3° Even more modest-size goals can
usually be broken down into smaller goals that can fit into the most
impatient person's life (I fit that description).
GOAL
SPRINT
l
TASK
Breaking down goals into Sprints mitigates the risks of being
overwhelmed and fatigued. If you're no good in the kitchen but
you're determined to change that, don't start by serving soufflés to
six of your fancy foodie friends. Even if it all works out, the pressure
may make the experience so unpleasant that you'll risk spoiling
your curiosity for cooking altogether. Feelings of hardship can
quickly eclipse those of curiosity or satisfaction. Start with a
smaller, simpler dish, and see how you feel when it's done.
How are Sprints different from just dividing a goal into phases?
Unlike phases, which are not ends in themselves, Sprints are
independent, self-contained projects—thus the outcome is, let's
hope, a source of satisfaction, information, and motivation to keep
going (or, as happened with my stop-motion animation project, a
helpful cue to let this particular goal go).
One author and entrepreneur, for example, was curious about
podcasting. It was something he knew little about. Rather than
dedicating himself to becoming a podcaster, he set out to do six
episodes with his friend Kevin Rose. That experiment turned into
The Tim Ferriss Show , the number one business podcast on iTunes,
with over 200 episodes and over 100 million downloads. It goes to
show that we shouldn't underestimate the potential impact of small,
focused projects. The first version of bulletjournal.com was also the
result of a Sprint.
To set up Sprints, structure them around specific subset goals or
skills needed for a longer-term goal. To return to the cooking
analogy, here's how that might look:
LONG-TERM GOAL: LEARN HOW TO COOK
Possible Sprints:
e Learn knife skills
Learn how to sear and sauté [adding Tasks for other methods as you go]
Learn how to select fresh vegetables [leveling up to Tasks for selecting fruits,
meats, poultry, etc.]
e Learn how to cook eggs [setting up related Tasks one by one: hard-boiled,
scrambled, over easy, an omelet]
SPRINT REQUIREMENTS:
1. Have no major barriers to entry (nothing preventing you
from starting). For example, to learn knife skills, you don't
have to purchase an entire expensive set of chef's knives. You
just need a basic kitchen utility knife that you may already own
or can buy with minimal investment.
2. Consist of very clearly defined, actionable Tasks. Your
knife skills might be broken down into holding a knife
properly, sharpening, peeling, slicing, dicing, cubing, mincing,
and so on.
3. Have a fixed, relatively short time frame for completion
(should take less than a month to complete, ideally a week or
two). Just making a salad several days a week and mastering a
simple vegetable soup recipe would get your knife skills up to
speed pretty quickly.
Following these three rules will keep your Sprints focused,
actionable, and manageable. When structured correctly, it should be
hard to come up with a valid excuse to postpone a Sprint. If you
think a Sprint will take longer than a month, just split it into two
smaller Sprints.
The point is to safely indulge your curiosity and try
things on for size, without wasting time.
BRAIN STORM
Before we can break down our goal, we have to wrap our head
around it. Now that you've picked your goal and created a Collection
for it in your Bullet Journal, use the first spread to brainstorm the
what and the why . Dig in and explore. Write down whatever comes
to mind. This process gets your gears turning. Suppose your “Learn
to Cook" goal brainstorming page looks like this:
1. What about this goal sparked my curiosity?
l've always wondered how foods go from just sitting in the store to being a
beautiful, nutritious meal on a plate. What happens, exactly?
2. What motivated me to want to invest my time and energy here?
I’m spending a lot on take-out and prepared foods, and | know it's not the
healthiest way to eat. l've gained a little weight lately and want to watch my
calories.
3. What am | trying to accomplish?
By learning to cook, | can save money and eat more healthfully, and | hope to
lose a few pounds. I also want to be able to invite friends or a date over for a
meal and not worry about screwing things up.
4. What will it require?
Learning basic food-prep skills, basic cooking skills, and some easy go-to
recipes for my own meals and a few crowd-pleasers like chili, soup, or burgers.
5. What is my definition of success with this goal?
Spending less on take-out and prepared foods, healthier diet, and having
friends over for dinner.
When you're done brainstorming, you should have a better idea
of your goal's requirements: its scope, its milestones, and why it's
important to you.
Now break it up into Sprints. Each Sprint can be laid out in
another Subcollection (this page ) in your Bullet Journal. Next,
you'll break each sprint down even further into its component
Tasks.
Once you've listed out your Tasks, start figuring out how much
time each Sprint would take. If you've ever had the privilege of
working with a contractor, the same adage applies here: Take the
time estimate and triple it. Progress is more important than speed.
If something gets done more quickly than anticipated, great! There's
nothing wrong with getting something done faster than expected (as
long as you're not focusing on speed). What we want to avoid is
falling behind. That tips our pleasure/pain scale toward the pain
side and makes it harder for us to stick with the process. If you have
the time, use it to your advantage. If you don't, reduce the scope of
your Sprint.
TRADITIONAL / PHASED MODEL
PHASE A
2 PHRASE 6
o
= PHASE C
>
5 ense O
<=
TIME =X
SPRINT MODEL
e
bd
=
t-
o
TIM£ =X
Once you have your Sprints planned, block them out on the
Calendar of your choice. Lock in a dedicated time to work through
your Tasks. Now you know when the project begins, how long it will
take, when to work on it, and when it ends.
The longer a goal takes to accomplish, the more it taxes your
motivation. When motivation runs dry, goals tend to crumble.
Sprint projects will help you reduce the load so you can enjoy the
satisfaction of seeing regular progress. How you feel about a project
is vital to its success, especially for personal endeavors, where you
may not have a team or a boss to help you stay on task. Progress
provides momentum. Momentum helps you cultivate your patience.
A writer living in Sweden, Olov Wimark believes one reason he
fell into depression is that it felt like his task list never got shorter.
He was using an app that erased a task whenever he checked it off
his list. His breakthrough came when his computer crashed and he
started using an old typewriter. ^I found that I wasn't all that hard
on myself for a typo. Since I couldn't edit out what was already
written, I had to live with what I wrote or rewrite the entire page.
Words started to really flow out of me. And lo and behold, when
evening came, there was a stack of work that had been done sitting
in a pile next to the typewriter. I started feeling good about my
accomplishments again." Similarly, he says, “the Bullet Journal is
very tangible. Progress is apparent and reviews happen
continuously, every time you open it to make a new notation." He
filled an old reservoir pen with blue-gray ink and went to town.
"Everything left open in my old system got transferred, planned,
processed, or simply ignored."
Dividing larger goals into Sprints also acts as damage control.
Perhaps one Sprint doesn't work out. You realize that it's not for
you, or you come across information or a situation that throws a
wrench into the gears. If you planned your Sprint well, shutting it
down won't derail you from related Sprints. At worst, you may have
to shuffle around your schedule a bit.
Successful or not, Sprints provide you with room for reflection.
In addition to Daily Reflection (this page )—which you can apply to
your projects, not just your Daily Log—you have an opportunity
after each Sprint to pause and reflect on the experience thus far. For
example:
1. What am I learning about my strengths, my weaknesses?
2. What's working, and what isn't?
3. What could I do a bit better next time?
4. What value was added to my life?
Perhaps you discover that you need to refine your master goal,
given what you learned along the way. That's great! Suppose you
realize that you just want to cook Italian food, or that you only want
to cook for large groups of people, or that you're much more
interested in growing food than cooking it. Whatever the case may
be, these realizations will help you dial in your goal, allowing you to
allocate your time and energy more effectively. Course correction
just means you've uncovered something even more meaningful, and
that's the point. Just reapply the lessons you learned from the last
Sprint to the next Sprint. This self-perpetuating cycle allows you to
continually grow as you close in on what matters.
SMALL STEPS
I had three friends who shared three things in common: a soul-
crushing desk job, a passion for yoga, and, at one point, a totally
idyllic Instagram feed. You know the ones: posts of pristine white
beaches bordered by lush palms and sky-blue waters. Endless
images of beautiful people laughing their way through coconut
cocktails, lounging around beach bonfires.
The first, let's call her Karen, quit her job, sold all her stuff, and
moved to Costa Rica to become a yoga instructor. A year later she
was right back at her desk. Why? She said that she didn't enjoy
teaching yoga to entitled tourists at a resort. She had wanted to
travel the world and experience local cultures. It didn't occur to her
that locals couldn't afford to pay her to teach yoga and that working
on the road greatly reduced the pleasure of travel. It was the same
grind, just with better weather, but far away from the people she
loved.
The second, let's call her Rachel, also quit her job for a yoga
teaching position at a dreamy beach resort. A little over a year later,
she resumed being a desk jockey. Her reason? She realized that
teaching yoga took the fun out of it for her. What was once her
treasured refuge became a job—and a much more physically
strenuous one at that.
The last, let's call her Leigh, quit her office job a decade ago and
has never looked back. She teaches yoga all around the world. What
made her experience different? She started small. She began with
teaching one class a week on weekends while still working her nine-
to-five. An avid traveler, she used her vacations to experiment with
teaching for a week or two at various resorts. It wasn't for her.
Nothing lost, knowledge gained. Next, she tested being a guest
instructor on retreats. Bingo. She loved retreats. They were
intimate, fun, and profitable enough. The experience also gave her
ideas for how she could improve on the retreat model. She started
organizing her own local retreats. As they built steam, she moved
them to more tropical places. And so it went. Rather than uproot her
life, Leigh took a systematic approach to accomplishing her goal.
She approached change with patience and curiosity, gradually
figuring out one piece of the puzzle at a time. That inquisitive-yet-
methodical approach ultimately allowed her to successfully
transition into and sustain a very different kind of life.
Change is critical to productivity and growth— personal,
professional, or otherwise. It can be a powerful way to alter our
circumstances, but it can backfire. Large changes trigger our fear
response. The more afraid we are, the more we need to calm
ourselves. Many a great productive gesture or action has resulted in
an equal or greater measure of inactivity. Peaks where we believe
anything is possible are followed by shadowed valleys where we
think maybe nothing is.
So how do we effect change in a way that is sustainable without
stressing ourselves out? In Japan, there is a concept known as
kaizen . Kai roughly translates to “change,” and zen translates to
“good”—thus, “good change." Another translation, perhaps tellingly,
is “continual improvement."
Unlike in the West, where *disruption" is a buzzword for our
favorite flavor of progress, kaizen focuses on surfacing
opportunities for incremental improvement. It's an approach to
problem-solving that takes the form of small questions like: What
little thing can we change to improve the situation? What could be
done better the next time? This is a powerful way to suss out
achievable improvements, which makes it much easier to enjoy
continued progress.
Though kaizen originated as a method to improve the quality and
company culture of the Japanese automotive industry, its
application is universal. When applied to our daily lives, kaizen can
become a critical change agent. By bringing our attention to the
little things, we can effect change while we avoid overwhelm. All we
need to do is solve one small problem at a time. Each solution
builds on those that came before it, and therefore these small steps
add up quickly, effecting massive change over time.
IN PRACTICE
ASK SMALL QUESTIONS
In the Goals chapter (this page ), we discussed how to accomplish
your goals by breaking them down into smaller self-contained
Sprints. Now let's take these Sprints and break them down into
actionable steps, or Tasks.
Create your Tasks through the lens of curiosity rather than by
giving yourself commands or ultimatums. It's the difference
between “Lose weight!" and “What one unhealthy thing could I
remove from my diet?"
Our minds respond well to questions because we're problem
solvers. You can engage your curiosity by asking yourself questions
to spark your imagination:
e What do I want to do?
e Why do I want to do it?
e What small thing can I do right now to get started?
Keeping your questions small helps the resulting Tasks remain
manageable. The harder the Task, the more effort it will require and
the more likely you'll be to put it off. Make the Tasks as effortless as
possible.
You can also apply this technique if you come to a standstill in
your project. Even if you're held up by something or someone,
chances are there's still an action you can take to keep the project
moving forward. Ask yourself questions such as:
e What small step can I take now to move this forward?
e What could I improve now?
It might be something as simple as researching relevant
information on the internet, asking a few questions of a
knowledgeable friend or colleague, recalibrating your Sprints, or
writing a long-form entry in your notebook about what you've
learned so far. Challenging yourself to find opportunities for
incremental improvement will often yield a way forward. It's a
simple way of training yourself to become more proactive.
The most powerful application of this technique is for problem-
solving. The Bullet Journal method did not appear fully formed. It
was slowly assembled by solving one challenge at a time. Over the
years, most of the solutions I tested didn't work. Yet I wouldn't
describe those efforts as failures. Each attempt that missed the
mark taught me something new, which ultimately led to a better
solution. In the words of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: “Mistakes are a
great educator when one is honest enough to admit them and
willing to learn from them."
When you run into issues, take a step back and start to tease
them apart by asking small questions like:
e What exactly did not work?
e Why did it not work?
e What small thing can I improve next time?
Whatever obstacles or challenges you may encounter along the
way, meet them with curiosity. Embrace them and examine them by
asking small questions. Don't let fear, pride, or impatience deprive
you of the opportunity to ask. As Carl Sagan once said, "There are
naive questions, tedious questions, ill-phrased questions, questions
put after inadequate self-criticism. But every question is a cry to
understand the world. There is no such thing as a dumb question."
40
ITERATION
Once we have answers, we need to check them because they'll often
be wrong. That's okay. It's simply part of the process of finding a
solution. Thomas Edison supposedly once quipped, *I have not
failed, I just found 10,000 ways that won't work." There's benefit
and utility in failure. When actively embraced as a learning
mechanism, it can help us grow. Rather than perceiving failure as
an end, it should be redefined as an essential part of the creative
process, the unavoidable precursor to success. For example, Sir
James Dyson, inventor of the Dyson vacuum cleaner, tested 5,126
prototypes to produce the results he wanted. Now he's valued at
over $4 billion. 4
Edison, Dyson, and many others like them honor their failures by
actively reapplying the lessons they learned. “Failure” allowed them
to refine their ideas over and over again until they finally arrived at
a solution that worked. This is known as the iterative cycle, which
powers kaizen .
Iteration sounds more complicated than it is. Once you ask
yourself a small question, like What small thing can I change to
make this better? , you've already started a process known as the
Deming Cycle, after W. Edwards Deming, the father of kaizen . #2
The Deming Cycle provides us with a four-stage framework for
continual improvement: *Plan — Do — Check — Act." Let's break
that down.
1. Plan: Recognize an opportunity and plan a change.
2. Do: Put the plan into play and test the change.
3. Check: Analyze the results of your test and identify what
you've learned.
4. Act: Act on what you've learned. If the change didn't work, go
through the cycle again with a different plan. If you were
successful, incorporate what you learned to plan new
improvements. Rinse and repeat.
DAILY SCHEDULE
: i
AM Reflection
8 Plan ©
9
10
Priorities
11 l
12
1 Lunch i
2
3
4 Tasks Jj
5 Do
6
7 Dinner I
8
9 Personal Priorities I
10
11 l
PM Reflection = Check .
= At
Now, let's see how you can implement this in your Bullet
Journal. Each day can be viewed as an iterative cycle. The most
straightforward way is to plan during your AM Reflection ( this page
), do during the day, and check and act during your PM Reflection.
cnl
©)
ITERATIONS
As with all things Bullet Journal, this is not the only way it can be
applied. You can run iterative cycles whenever you like—daily,
weekly, even during your Monthly Migration (this page ). What’s
important is that it becomes a regular part of your approach.
Productivity is in large part a matter of consistency. Once you get
it out of your head that you have to work at breakneck speed, you
can focus on the process. Short of superhuman willpower, that’s the
only way you'll keep at it.
BETTER DAYS
This may all seem like a lot of work, especially if you’re feeling low,
stuck, or overwhelmed. You tell yourself that you lack the money,
energy, time, or will to tackle your professional goals, let alone your
personal ones. Just because these thoughts are real does not make
them true. Even at the very bottom, you have a choice.
You can choose to focus on all the reasons why you can’t, or you
can look for some small way in which you can . If you're not happy
with your life, then ask yourself, What tiny thing could I do
tomorrow that would make my life a little bit better? Perhaps it’s
calling a friend, leaving a few minutes early to take the scenic route
to work on a fine day, or tackling the chair that's drowning in your
clothes. Again, we're looking for any win, no matter how small. Set
the bar so low that you'll actually do it, and log it as a Task in your
Bullet Journal.
Ask yourself the same question the next day. Find something,
anything , that will make your life a little better. Perhaps catch up
with another friend whose name came up during yesterday's call, try
getting coffee from that funky little place you discovered on the
scenic route, or sort one dresser drawer.
Continue doing this every day for a month, and keep track of it in
your Bullet Journal. Before you know it, you'll have reconnected
with people you care about, found fun new places, and enjoyed
returning to a home that is less of a disaster. You've narrowed that
gap between where you are and where you want to be. This is how
small actions inspired by small questions can have an exponential
positive impact on your life. Question by question, task by task,
you're cultivating a sustainable path toward continual improvement
and good change, one small step at a time.
22 |23 |24 |25 |26 |24 | 2£ | WEEK 4
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WEEK 2
TIME
In the end it’s not the years in your life that count, it’s life in your years.
—ABRAHAM LINCOLN
wee asked to describe his theory of relativity, Einstein
(mercifully) paraphrased it like this: “When a man sits with a
pretty girl for an hour, it seems like a minute. But let him sit on a
hot stove for a minute and it’s longer than any hour. That’s
relativity.” #3 In other words, our perception of time changes relative
to what we are doing.
Just think about how different our perception of time is now
compared to when we were kids. Back then, an hour-long car ride
seemed to last forever. Are we there yet? The older we get, the less
sensitive we become to the passage of time and the less mindful we
are about how we spend it. Deadline after deadline, goal after goal,
time races by, especially when we’re busy. Because our experience
of time is so relative, it’s easy to forget that it’s a finite resource.
Before we know it, we're out of time.
The hard truth is that we can’t “make time,” we can
only “take time.”
Though we can’t make more, we can increase the quality of the
time we take.
Measuring the quality of time is not an exact science, but a key
indicator is impact. How often have you sat at your desk all day, yet
felt like you accomplished very little? Conversely, sometimes you sit
down for a few hours and crank out a few days' worth of work. It
has little to do with the amount of time you had; it's about how
much attention you were able to bring into the present moment.
Reining in your attention can prove difficult because our minds are
incompetent time travelers. They have a tendency to get lost in both
the past and the future. How often do we catch ourselves fixating on
things we can't change, or worrying about things we can't predict?
That's a lot of time and energy siphoned away from the only place
where we can actually make a difference: the here and now.
The quality of our time is determined by our ability to
be present.
Our attention lives on a spectrum. On one side are things that
repel our curiosity, like going to the DMV. On the opposite side of
the spectrum is a state often referred to as "flow," where we are
most present and can have the most impact.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, PhD, the Hungarian psychologist who
coined the term, spent his career studying what makes people
happy. During his research he interviewed creatives from all fields,
from painters to poets to scientists. All described an ideal state in
which their work seemed to take on a life of its own. Some
described it as ecstatic. The root of the word “ecstasy” comes from
the Greek ekstasis , which means "standing outside oneself."
Csikszentmihalyi posits that this feeling is the result of the mind
being so consumed with a task that it cannot consciously process
the experience of self. ** We enter flow when we're fully engaged.
It's here, when we're totally present, that we unlock our full
productive and creative potential. So is it possible to create flow?
Flow, like happiness, is something that can't be forced. By being
strategic with our use of time, however, we can create the
conditions where flow is more likely to occur.
AROUSAL
ANXIETY
CHALLENGE
APATHY RELAXATION
Boredom
SKILL
Based on the work of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, PhD
IN PRACTICE
TIME BOXING
No matter how intentional your life may be, you probably have
some responsibilities that are not necessarily enjoyable, but are
unavoidable. We all do. Some may seem difficult, which scares us
(having that heart-to-heart with our significant other, approaching
our boss about a raise, giving a big presentation). Others may seem
too easy, which bores us (cleaning the house, paying bills, routine
stuff at work). We tend to put off both types of activities as long as
we can. Of course they don’t just disappear; they tick away on our
Task list like time bombs. The longer we put them off, the more of a
priority they become. That's how piddly stuff like paying bills
becomes an energy-zapping, time-sucking, undeserving emergency
of late charges, low balances, and financial angst that blows up in
your face.
We can defuse these obligations through time boxing. As its
name suggests, time boxing quarantines an activity to an allotted
slot of time. It's designed to bring your full attention to something
by only allowing you to focus on it for a predefined period of time.
Time boxing adds two key motivational ingredients to
a Task you've been putting off: structure and
urgency.
If you only have 30 minutes a day to read something you will be
tested on, you'll make those 30 minutes count. You're making it
painless enough to temper your impatience (“This won't drag on,
thank goodness”), simple enough that you won’t get overwhelmed
(“This I can do!”), and challenging enough to engage your attention
(*Okay, 30 minutes to get my head into this. Brain, we've got this.
Go!”).
Let’s say you have to file your taxes in a month. Rather than
waiting until the last minute and realizing that there’s all sorts of
stuff that you didn’t take into account and then stressing out about
it, break it down into time-boxing sessions. For example:
e Sessions 1—2: Sun., 8:30—9:00 p.m.—Gather materials.
e Sessions 3-6: Mon., Wed., Sun., 8:30—9:00 p.m.—Compile
materials into spreadsheet.
e Session 7: Tues., 8:30—9:00 p.m.—Wrap up and submit files.
e Session 8: Thurs. (last day), 8:30-9:00 p.m.—Provide any
additional info.
The key to creating flow is balancing the challenge of a task with
your skill level. If you lack the skills for a given Task, then that Task
can quickly cause anxiety and feel overwhelming. Time boxing
allows you to whittle away at a Task and incrementally improve
your skill in the process. Over time, this can reduce how challenging
something is. If on the other hand a task requires little to no effort,
then our ability to engage is also very low. In this context, time
boxing can be used to increase the challenge by creating a sense of
urgency.
SCHEDULING: DON'T PUT IT OFF, PUT IT FIRST
Our attention span drains throughout the day. When we do
something has a large impact on how well we do it. If there's
something you find yourself putting off, then you've identified your
chore. Procrastination indicates that it may be the most challenging
Task on your list, because it worries you or doesn't interest you. Put
it first.
I fully appreciate not wanting to start the day with something
that's not exciting or motivating. All the more reason to just get it
out of the way. It's the pebble in your shoe. Take it out before it
makes real trouble. Front-loading your day with the easy stuff is its
own form of procrastination. Getting more onerous chores out of
the way first makes the rest of the day feel easier. Like when
running with weights on, you feel lighter and stronger as soon as
they come off.
Another benefit to this reverse hierarchy of Tasks is that you're
working your way toward the things that interest you the most. It's
much easier to maintain focus and motivation throughout the day
when you have something to look forward to. That being said, we all
have different biorhythms. Some people light up at night. The trick
is to figure out when you're most focused and productive, and plan
accordingly.
MEMENTO MORI
It had been a year since I had last talked to my grandfather. I knew
his health was failing, so I wrote “Call Grandy" in my Bullet Journal.
But before I got around to it, he was gone. Most everyone I know
has a similar story, a similar regret. Death provides the most salient
reminder of the value of time.
The Romans had a phrase, memento mori , which roughly
translates to “remember death.” Legend has it that when the
generals returned victorious from battle and paraded down the
street, they had a servant whisper this phrase into their ear over and
over, to keep them humble and focused.
That all living things must die is one of the few absolute truths
we will ever know. Yet, in the West, we all but demonize
impermanence. Death is anthropomorphized as the Grim Reaper, a
ghoulish enemy looming in the shadows, waiting to take everything
from us. It's a terrifying notion that makes our relationship with the
inevitable very one-sided. It doesn't need to be this way. Embracing
the reality of impermanence can make the time we have
significantly richer.
Think of your favorite food. Let's say it's pizza. Suppose that one
day you're told that you will get to enjoy pizza eighty-seven more
times in your life. Does this make you dislike, avoid, and dread
eating pizza? Does pizza become depressing? No, it would likely be
the opposite. Simply being aware that it's limited heightens your
ability to experience it, to be more present, to savor each bite with
an appreciation that had been unavailable to you before.
Steadily reminding yourself that you, your insufferable colleague,
your pet, your lover, your sibling, your parent will die can
fundamentally improve the nature of your interactions with all. It
can make you more empathetic, forgiving, patient, kind, and
grateful. Most of all, it can improve the quality of your time by
helping you to become more present.
Marcus Aurelius, emperor of Rome and Stoic philosopher, once
said: ^You could leave life right now. Let that determine what you
do, say, and think." ^» How would your life change if you truly
operated under those directives? Would everything stay the same?
What would you do differently? What would you say differently?
Did simply thinking this way pull things into greater clarity or offer
a new perspective? The real question is: Why don't we already
operate this way? After all, this is the reality we inhabit.
We can't always control what fate drops in our lap. In the
moments where we do have a choice, we must be vigilant about
what we let into our days because we don't have life to spare.
During Migration we ask ourselves “what is vital” and “what
matters" to help us filter out distractions from our lives. Sometimes
they're hard questions to answer. Adding this lens of impermanence
to your Reflection can provide clarity by reminding you of what's at
stake. We remember death so we don't forget to make the most out
of our time alive.
GRATITUDE
Life is so subtle that sometimes you barely notice yourself walking through the doors you
once prayed would open.
—BRIANNA WIEST
T here’s a scene in David Lynch’s Twin Peaks where Special Agent
Dale Cooper and Officer Harry S. Truman walk into the quaint
Double R diner. As they enter, Agent Cooper taps Officer Truman on
the chest, smiling, and says, “I’m going to let you in on a little
secret. Every day, once a day, give yourself a present.”
The present? An order of two cups of “good, hot, black coffee.”
There is something deeply touching about this scene. In the
weird, violent, and questionable sanity of the Lynchian world
surrounding him, Cooper found a way to inject his life with some
lightness.
He’s taking stock of the good. He loves this diner, he loves this
coffee, and he’s granting himself a moment to take it all in and
appreciate it. Though he claims that this ritual is a secret, I would
argue that it’s an underrated skill available to us all.
In the meditative tradition of mindfulness, we’re taught to bring
our attention into the moment. Be it doing the dishes, brushing our
teeth, or standing in the checkout line, we're fully there, cultivating
our ability to be present. Acommon misconception about
meditation is that it’s about getting rid of thoughts. Rather,
mindfulness helps distance yourself from them. A helpful metaphor
shared by one of my teachers was that if thoughts were cars,
meditation helps us stand on the side of the road rather than getting
stuck in traffic.
It's easy to get so caught up in the traffic of our lives that we can
easily pass right by even the most important of moments. A glowing
example of this is how we fixate on achievement. If achievement is
a defining measure of productivity, then what is the defining
measure of achievement? In other words, why is achievement
valuable? To prosper? To grow? It can be, but only if we take the
time to examine the impact of our efforts. Just because you're
driving at full speed does not mean you're going in the right
direction.
The next time you cross off a Task in your BuJo, slow down. Take
a moment to pause and reflect on the impact of your
accomplishment. What do you feel? If by chance you feel nothing—
or maybe nothing but relief—then chances are the thing you're
working so diligently toward isn't adding much value to your life.
That's a critical insight that needs to be recognized. If on the other
hand you feel even a small sense of joy, pride, appreciation, or
fulfillment, then you may be onto something. Gift yourself a
moment to appreciate your accomplishment and acknowledge it,
because it's trying to reveal something to you. After all, if you can't
appreciate your achievements, then what's the point?!
Your achievements have the power to nurture and guide you, but
in order for that to happen, you need to take time to be grateful for
them.
IN PRACTICE
CELEBRATION
Your Bullet Journal houses a running list of your Tasks. Once
complete, a Task turns into an accomplishment. When crossing
something off as complete, you're given an opportunity to
acknowledge this accomplishment. If its impact is even remotely
positive, celebrate it! If it's a big win, such as completing a
milestone or a long-term goal, plan a proper celebration, ideally
with those who were involved or are excited for your win. If it's a
medium-size achievement, maybe call a friend or call it a day a little
earlier than usual. If it's a small achievement, smile! Snap your
fingers! Do a fist pump. Exclaim: “Done!” Enjoy the dopamine rush.
Celebrating your victories isn't just about patting yourself on the
back; it trains you to identify positive moments, which allows you to
discover—and enjoy—more of them.
Celebrating small wins can produce dramatic improvements in
our self-perception and attitude. We tend to ruminate over all the
things we got wrong, unaware of or ignoring all the things we got
right. By celebrating our accomplishments, we're forcing ourselves
to acknowledge our abilities and witness the proof that we can
contribute. It shifts our attitude away from “How am I going to get
all of this done?" to “Look at all the things I’ve done! I've got this."
The fear of failure will find less purchase in your mind. This is not a
self-indulgence. It's an intentional means to build momentum,
optimism, and resilience. A simple yet meaningful way to begin
appreciating your achievements is to write them down. Committing
them to paper makes you pause and honor a good moment with
your attention. In the Bullet Journal, you can do this by logging
Events that you're grateful for in your Daily Log, in your Monthly
Calendar, or in a Gratitude Log.
GRATITUDE PRACTICE
Studies show that we need about five compliments to balance out
every negative remark made toward us. That's because we
remember negative events more intensely than positive ones.
Introducing a gratitude practice—a simple process of regularly
taking stock of what you're grateful for—is a good way to counteract
your negativity bias by fostering an awareness of the positive things
in your life. 4°
Having a gratitude practice has been shown to improve
relationships, physical and mental health, empathy, self-esteem,
lowering aggression—the list goes on. 47 I like to think of it as
helping our ongoing dialogue with life remain productive. With that
in mind, let's take a look at two simple examples of how to
incorporate a gratitude practice in your Bullet Journal.
1. In your Daily Log (this page ), during your PM Reflection (this
page ), write down more than one thing that you're grateful for.
Try to do this every day.
2. Create a "Gratitude" Collection (and remember to add it to your
Index). Again, write down more than one thing that you're
grateful for. Try to do this every day. If you're so inclined, you
can even get creative with how you capture your favorite
moments (this page ).
Chances are you'll find yourself quickly running out of obvious
things to be grateful for, such as health, home, family, friends, dogs,
etc. The trick is to avoid repurposing the things you've listed before.
That's when things get interesting. It's when we exhaust our stock
answers that we begin to dig into our daily experience for material.
It helps us become more present. As you actively examine your
experience to find the good, you become better at locating it and
appreciating it. You learn that—to paraphrase the Benedictine monk
David Steindl-Rast—you can't be grateful for everything, but you
can be grateful in every moment. 4?
Even on the days when not much has moved forward, your
gratitude practice will help you find things to appreciate—whether
it’s a coworker who helped you out, a stranger who opened a door, a
meal you savored, or a parking space close to the entrance. It will
help you remain aware of the things that make life a little more
enjoyable. Every day, once a day, give yourself the present of
savoring the good in your life.
0
M
n rin e
| PE
p» | Em
CONTROL
God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; courage to change the
things I can; and wisdom to know the difference.
—REINHOLD NIEBUHR
T he fact that all things must change is one of the few universal
truths. On the one hand it frightens us because things can
change for the worse. We invest immense amounts of time and
energy, not to mention money, trying to prevent or mitigate
negative change like losing our jobs, status, security, health, or
relationships. The same is true for implementing positive change,
be it our education, appearance, ability, or general personal growth.
In both cases, a lot of that effort goes to waste, because it's applied
to things we simply have no power to change. Knowing what we can
change begins with defining what's in our control.
This endeavor is found at the heart of Stoicism, an ancient school
of philosophy focused on cracking the age-old conundrum of how to
live a good life. To Stoics, a critical part of the solution was *to know
the difference" between the things we can and can't control.
According to them, we can't control the world around us, nor the
people in it. It's our futile resistance to this truth that can leave us
frustrated, devastated, or at a total lost. For example, when we seek
the approval or acknowledgment of others as reward for our efforts,
more often than not we're left wanting or downright angry and
confused when we don't get what we're looking for. Why are we
feeling so bad? Because we've set an expectation for something that
isn't in our control.
When you look at life through this lens, a lot of examples come
to light. No matter how kind you are to someone, they just don't like
you. You provide sound advice, and your friend goes right out and
does the opposite. You put in a ton of overtime, only to get passed
over for promotion. You open up your heart, and it gets broken. The
list, if we let it, can be endless. The more we try to control others,
the more draining life becomes.
If we can't control the world or people around us, all we're left
with is the world within us, right? Well, we're complex emotional
creatures. We can't help but feel anger toward those who wrong us
or sadness at a loss. So, no, we're not entirely in control of
ourselves, either. Bottom line: We can't control our feelings, people,
or external events. But there is something we can control, and it's
powerful.
We can control how we respond to what happens to
us.
It's within our power to be intentional about how we respond to
the wildly creative problems the world, people, and even our
emotions subject us to. No matter what happens in your life, no
matter how bad things get, you're never entirely at the mercy of
your experience. There is always opportunity and freedom to be
found in how we choose to act. It's our obligation, then, to make the
most of this freedom.
If my computer so much as hiccupped, l'd take it out on my mouse and keyboard in
awful ways, which is like punching a puddle to lash out at the rain. When I started
Bullet Journaling, | began asking “Why?” before getting upset about every little
thing. If someone cut me off on the freeway, I’d ask myself why l'd get upset about
something | can't control. Now I just allow more space between my car and the one
in front of me.
—Bullet Journalist Trey Kauffman
SEE Psople | WORLD
CONTROL
IMPACT
IN PRACTICE
RESPONDING VS. REACTING
Our reactions are often more instinctual than intentional, especially
when a situation or a person is doing their best to bring out our
worst. Say your colleague Chad offends you and you puff up like a
blowfish trying to protect yourself. You could waste so much time
contemplating the many ways in which Chad is wrong about you,
about the situation, about his choice in shoes, and about life in
general. Or worse, you lash out at him, he lashes back, and it spirals
down from there until you're both on the same low rung of the
evolutionary ladder.
We waste our energy trying to “protect” ourselves because, deep
inside, we're animals. When our ancestors were triggered, they
survived by running or biting. Fight or flight. Some time has passed
since we swung from trees, and we now have other options available
to us. We can do better.
Rather than gently ushering Chad out the window, take a deep
breath and don't take the bait. Let the heat of the moment pass.
During your Daily Reflection, you can start to examine the
experience from a better place. Why did he say or do what he did?
Why would he volunteer this questionable opinion? Why did it
upset you exactly? What are your options here?
Use these thoughts to formulate a measured response in the
form of a letter written in your Bullet Journal. Now, to be clear, this
letter is not necessarily for Chad. It's for you to get your thoughts
straight. It's to reveal opportunities and insights that may have been
obscured in the heat of the moment. This trick has helped me deal
with very challenging people and situations. First of all, it allows
you to safely vent. Getting it all out of your head offers some much
needed relief. Seeing your thoughts on paper can also highlight
where you're being petty, unreasonable, or even irrational. With
that out of the way, you can begin to dial it back, restating your case
in a calm considered way, and to figure out productive next steps.
For example, it might hit you that a main source of contention is
that you don't understand where the other person is coming from.
You can probably get clarity on that. If you're able to have a
conversation with the other person, try to actually hear what they're
saying. You may realize that they have a point. Perhaps they
misperceived something, and if you were in their place, you would
be angry also. The fact that they acted like a ding-dong doesn't make
them wrong...and just because you were offended does not make
you right.
In the process of writing this letter, perhaps you realize what
they said or did has nothing to do with you. In the heat of a
challenging moment, it's easy to forget that our assailant may be
struggling with their own measure of pain. By reacting with fear or
anger, we only deepen their wounds and ours, severing
opportunities for understanding, progress, or resolution. We also
prolong wasting time and energy worrying about something that we
can't control.
PROCESS VS. OUTCOME
Mark Twain once wrote, "T've had a lot of worries in my life, most of
which never happened." *? Worry has a way of holding our attention
hostage. This is especially true for things we can't control due to the
elevated level of uncertainty. We burn through a lot of resources
obsessing over possible outcomes and forming contingency plans,
but in reality we're just fueling our anxiety. Trying to think our way
out of situations beyond our control may feel productive, but it's
nothing more than a powerful distraction.
Worry baits us with the promise of a solution but
usually offers none.
As the Dalai Lama once said: *If a problem can be solved, there is
no use worrying about it. If it can't be solved, worrying will do no
good." 52
During your Daily Reflection, or Monthly Migration, scan your
Tasks and try to identify what is and what is not in your control. An
easy tell is if your tasks are focused on outcome rather than process:
" e Give awesome presentation," “ e Lose 10 pounds,” * e Read five
books,” or * e Get Chad to see reason” are goals. Though goals
provide direction, they focus on outcomes that are ultimately out of
our control. This is why we break our goals down into small
actionable steps: “ e Memorize presentation," “ e No soda on
Sunday," “ e Set aside reading time,” and * e Address Chad's
concerns." These are the things you can control.
By identifying what is out of our control and letting go, we can
reclaim our attention and reinvest it into the things that are. Focus
on doing everything within your control to help something succeed.
There is nothing more that can be asked of us. More importantly,
there is nothing more that we can ask of ourselves.
RADIANCE
As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him.
—MAHATMA GANDHI
T hink about a toxic colleague you've worked with. Though you
may be pretty content with your job, what does it feel like when
they bad-mouth the company, complain about their work, or
manipulate people to get what they want? It leaves a bad taste in
your mouth; it stays with you. Without even realizing it, you can
spread that negativity to your partner over dinner, and even to your
partner's colleagues the next day, one study found. 5
Like a pebble dropped into a lake, our actions ripple out into the
world around us. Each ripple influences what it encounters, which
in turn ripples out even farther. When you hold the door open for
someone, for example, it may inspire a willingness for them to do so
for the next person or to extend a different kindness that would not
have existed without your influence. Similarly, when you snap at
someone, chances are their spouse, friend, or child will be subject to
the ripple effects of your action. I like to refer to this ability of ours
to influence the world around us as our radiance—literally, what we
radiate.
The nature of our radiance is often a reflection of what's going on
inside. It's why cultivating self-awareness, far from being selfish, is
vitally important. If we remain unaware of (or unwilling to) take
responsibility for our lesser qualities, such as negativity or anger,
we will inevitably pass them on to those in our proximity. The
charge of your words or actions begins to shape the world around
you to parallel the one within. Your lack of enthusiasm for a project
drains the team of theirs. Watch your bad mood be served back to
you in the silence of your partner over dinner.
I'm not suggesting that you force yourself to become a chirpy
Disney character with rainbows of perpetual optimism blasting out
your nose. Rather, we have an obligation to address our weaknesses
and to build on our strengths because we're not alone. Cultivating
our potential makes us more valuable to ourselves and to others,
especially those closest to us.
Though you can't control people, you will in some way influence
those you come in contact with, and they in turn may carry forward
that influence. Your knowledge can teach others. Your hard work
can inspire others. Your positive mood can uplift others. Seth Godin
once wrote, *You're either the person who creates energy. Or you're
the one who destroys it." 52
Bettering yourself leads to bettering others and—if we play that
ripple effect all the way out to its infinite potential and multiply it
by every willing soul—to bettering the world. If you don't want to
become better for yourself, do it for them. If your goal in life is to be
useful to others, you can start by figuring out how to be useful to
yourself.
RADIANCE
"fete ru ga uiv
IN PRACTICE
SELF-COMPASSION
Take a moment to think of a friend who is going through a rough
patch. Maybe they messed up at work or were cruel to someone or
just got dumped. Whatever it is, they're feeling pretty lousy about
themselves. You probably patiently sat there and listened to them
fixate on all the ways in which they are a terrible or useless person.
Maybe you tried to correct their distorted self-perception. You
pointed out the things they do well and the things they do right. You
reminded them how much you care about them and that everyone
makes mistakes. Perhaps you tried suggesting a way forward,
because you know that dwelling on perceived failures or
shortcomings is entirely unhelpful. At the very least, you listened.
We're happy to offer support and solace to those we care for. What
if we extended this same kindness to ourselves?
Easier said than done, right? We can find countless reasons to be
hard on ourselves, especially if we are insecure, are sensitive, or
breathe. We need to start trading in browbeating for the same clear-
eyed, compassionate counsel that we'd offer to others.
Self-compassion can start by asking yourself a simple
question: What would I tell a friend in this situation?
Asking this question interrupts our inner critic and makes us
switch gears into problem-solving mode. Can you imagine if a
tormented friend came to you for help and all you did was
exacerbate their suffering? Of course you can't, because you're a
good friend and you care. Yet that's exactly what many of us do to
ourselves all the time.
The next time you find yourself beating up the person who blows
out your birthday candles, pretend that you're taking care of a friend
in need. What patient and compassionate advice would you offer to
help them overcome or recontextualize their situation? If they
messed up at work, for example, it could tip off a downward spiral
where they start questioning their ability, their worth, and so on.
They quickly lose perspective. One simple way to make them feel
better is to present evidence that would force them to question their
inner critic. We can use the same tactic when we face our own.
When we've erred, the voice of our inner critic grows loud, and it
can be most convincing. Luckily we have some pretty compelling
evidence to prove them wrong, and it's penned in our own hand! If
you've been using your Daily Log, you've recorded clear examples of
your success, ability, kindness, caring, etc. This is especially true if
you're keeping a Gratitude Log (this page ). Whatever it is that you
may be faulting yourself for, it's likely that you'll find inarguable
proof to the contrary within the pages of your Bullet Journal.
When you're down, look at these examples during your
Reflections. Show yourself the evidence, and allow yourself to
accept it. It may be hard, and you may remain skeptical at first, but
try to make room in the dark inner choir for a benevolent voice. The
longer that voice remains, the more opportunities it has to be heard.
Over time, you may just be willing to trust it.
MUTUAL IMPROVEMENT
Radiance is a two-way street. So be mindful about the people you
surround yourself with, because they will shape you. Their
strengths and weaknesses can have a tremendous influence on your
own trajectory. It's critical therefore to be deliberate about who you
cultivate relationships with, both professionally and personally.
Look through your Bullet Journal to see who you're spending
your time with. You may know how you feel about them, but have
you ever considered their impact on you? Start to take notes on
some of these interactions. Don't worry, you're not keeping creepy
records on your friends; you're simply becoming mindful of how
their radiance affects you. Add some notes about the dinner, date, or
meeting when you get home. Did you have fun? What did you
learn? Was most of your time spent just sitting there listening to
their problems ... again? How do you feel when you're with them?
You can quickly capture it like this:
© Dinner with Becca @ Evelina's
— Talked about aspirations
— Want to travel to Portugal together
— Want to co-host the next party
— Always leave feeling motivated after we hang out
It may seem awkward at first, but recording your interactions
grants you the opportunity to articulate something you may not
have otherwise. You never know what it could reveal. Maybe you
realize that the relationship is vampiric: It often leaves you feeling
drained. Or that it's one-sided: You always call and put in all the
work. In contrast, you may realize that some people leave you
feeling inspired, lighter, energized, contemplative, or calmer.
Whatever the case may be, you're becoming more aware so you can
be intentional about managing your relationships, including which
relationships are worth managing at all.
Negative or unmotivated people in your life may sabotage your
efforts to live with intention. Try to keep company with those you
find inspiring, motivating, and constructively challenging. Ask
yourself: What can I learn from them? Is the world a bit of a better
place because they're in my life? Do they make me want to bea
better person?
As Joshua Fields Millburn of the Minimalists once quipped, “You
can't change the people around you, but you can change the people
around you.” ° You get to choose who you spend your precious time
with. Surround yourself with people who want the best for you. That
doesn't mean they'll always agree with you or be indiscriminately
supportive. No, find people who want you to succeed, even if that
means having hard conversations, disagreeing with you, and telling
you when you're wrong or being unreasonable. We all need to be
checked from time to time. Find people who challenge you to grow
from a place of mutual respect, appreciation, and caring.
LEARNING
The best way for your radiance to serve others is to challenge
yourself to grow. To that end, make deliberate learning an ongoing
focus of your life. Being intentional in your pursuit of knowledge
will help you engage with the world and open it up in ways you
would have never considered, or been willing to, otherwise.
During your Reflections, ask yourself:
e What am I learning?
e Whatlessonshas — | | [situation or relationship] taught
me or inspired me to learn?
e What do I want to know more about? How will I go about
learning it?
Whether it's reading, classes, conversations with trusted friends
and mentors, or enriching experiences, make it part of your plans.
Use your Bullet Journal to identify the things that inspire further
inquiry. Once you know what grabs your interest, set your goals
(this page ). You can tackle them the same way you would any other
goal in the Bullet Journal, but I've also provided the following visual
example of how to apply this approach directly to learning.
With each thing you learn, you become a more capable, well-
rounded, substantive individual. You'll add more value to anyone
within your presence—not because of what you do for them, but
because of what you've done to illuminate yourself.
LEARNING
WHAT
What things do | want to learn?
Create a Collection and write down what comes to mind.
All TOPICS
WHY
What do | want to learn first? Why?
Pick the thing you’re most curious about and create a Collection.
TOPIC
HOW
How will | go about learning?
Brainstorm what comes to mind.
Start creating a list of Tasks.
Ask yourself, what small thing can I do now to get this process started? Maybe
it's figuring out a time to research. Get to it!
ENDURANCE
If you know the why, you can live any how.
—FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
I don't know about you, but I deeply hate doing dishes. It's stupid, I
know. I've tried to make it a mindfulness practice, a way to
unplug, but no. It was my boyhood chore for years, and that soured
the deed for the rest of time.
My partner at the time wanted to learn how to cook. Developing
that skill forced me to spend my nights begrudgingly bulldozing the
ectoplasm off our kitchenware. And so it went. She would come
home, quickly undo my culinary exorcism from the previous
evening.
Yes, I should've just been grateful that I was getting home-
cooked meals, especially after she worked hard all day, but I
petulantly resented spending my limited free time cleaning up meal
after meal.
All of that changed one night when I heard her sing.
She was going through a really hard time when she took up
cooking. Her usually vibrant and charmingly goofy personality,
which had drawn me to her in the first place, was dialed way down.
Our communication was usually strong, but whatever she was going
through was something I couldn't help with. Of course, that added
to my frustration. After all, when the ones we love are in pain, the
last thing we want to do is nothing.
One night, before dinner, I was lifted from my work by a soft
melody that floated through our flat. I didn't understand what was
happening, as I had never heard her sing in the years we had been
together. But there she was, quietly singing and swaying by the
stove, fixing us supper.
That's when it dawned on me. This whole cooking thing had
nothing to do with food at all. It was her way of battling her demons
while still showing me how much she cared. It was something she
could control. That night while I did the dishes, that peaceful image
of her wouldn't leave my mind. I realized that all I had to do to help
her—all that I could do—was get my hands wet.
As time went on, she got better. I began looking forward to her
meals as she slowly eased back into her lovely old self. In fact, these
dinners became a safe place that allowed us to deepen our
relationship. When things got rocky and we needed to have a talk,
one of us would cook a meal for the other. No matter how hard the
conversation, it was always accompanied by this loving effort, a sign
of deep respect and caring. That included doing the dishes—which, it
turns out, was her least favorite thing to do, too. Nothing deepens a
relationship more than something you can hate together.
Did all this make me enjoy doing the dishes? No, but it did allow
me to see how it mattered. This seemingly menial chore that I had
merely endured suddenly added real value to my life. What had
changed? Not the pedestrian process of washing dishes. Of course,
what had changed was me. This task began to matter to me, and I
tried harder. One day she walked by while I was cleaning up after
the best meal I've ever enjoyed, and she kissed me on the cheek and
said, “Thank you. I know it was a lot tonight and that you hate doing
this, but it really helps me. It makes me feel loved."
When I used to think about defining and finding what mattered—
what was truly meaningful to me—it seemed to require some
dramatic gesture. Perhaps I'd have to pack my bags and seek out an
enlightened cave dweller in a cold, remote corner of the earth. I
know now that meaning can be found much closer to home.
Meaning can reveal itself in the most unremarkable,
unpredictable, and quiet of moments. If we're not listening to the
world around us, as well as the one within, we may miss it—the
music in the mundane. This is a skill that can be acquired through
study—but not of academics or anything beyond our ken. The
subject of our study is our experience.
Often we operate unconsciously. We make our way through life
on autopilot, seldom stopping to understand why something makes
us feel the way it does. Without personal context, without
understanding how something adds value to your life, your efforts
will ultimately feel meaningless. Context helps us understand how
some unpleasant or even painful responsibilities actually benefit us.
Let's explore some ways to surface context.
IN PRACTICE
CLARITY LOG
Sam Cawthorn, founder of Speakers Tribe, once said, “The happiest
people don't necessarily have the best of everything, but they make
the most of everything.” > A powerful way to begin this process is to
reframe the mundane in our mind. Many Tasks may not inspire
much joy at first blush: Do the laundry, finish project, buy groceries,
etc. Rather than focusing on the drudgery of the action, spend a
moment focusing on the experiences they enable. Doing the laundry
gives you fluffy towels after your shower, fresh shirts for your
workday, and crisp sheets to slip between at night. Finishing a
project gives you a feeling of satisfaction of a job well done and
keeps that paycheck rolling in—maybe some of which is going
toward your Hawaii vacation (this page ). Buying groceries will put a
tasty meal on your table or allow you to spend some quality time
with your loved ones.
This is not about positive thinking; it's about systematically
analyzing your efforts to define their purpose. We don't tend to
contextualize our obligations this way. To help us become mindful
of why we're doing what we're doing, we can create a "Clarity Log"
in our Bullet Journal. Scan your Daily Logs and identify the
obligations or chores that you struggle with the most. Take one and
write it down on the left page of your Clarity Log. Let's take paying
rent, for example:
Paying rent bums me out because it feels like a waste of money.
Sure, it's easy to look at paying rent as the monthly ritual where
you shovel your hard-won living into the icy void where your
landlord's soul should be. But surely there was a reason you rented
the place. Let's balance our negative perception of this obligation by
taking a moment to focus on what you enjoy about your home.
Close your eyes and conjure a detail or two about what keeps you
there, what makes this space a home. Whatever it is, write it on the
facing page, across from the challenge:
e The way that shaft of light warms the floor by the bed in the morning
e The fragrance of the coffee shop wafting in through the windows
« The commute time
No place is perfect, but if you're mostly happy with your home,
then paying rent can be reframed as the act of rewarding yourself
every month with those joys. It clarifies why this seeming chore is
meaningful.
Another way to discover personal meaning is to consider those
we love. Perhaps this exercise made you realize that you truly don't
like your home (if so, I apologize; I've been there). Not all is lost.
Think about why you moved there through the lens of your
relationships. Maybe this home allowed your kids to go to a better
school. Maybe it allowed you to be closer to work, so you would
spend less time commuting and more time with friends. Whatever it
was, write it down.
Connecting your obligations to the people you love can inject
them with much-needed meaning. While it may not make these
responsibilities any more enjoyable, it does finally give them
purpose, which can make even the most onerous task more
bearable.
CLARITY LOG
CLARITY LOG
- Safe
- Close to work
- Rent is high
PURPOSE
- Close to subway
CHALLENGE
TRACK PROGRESS
What if you’ve tried this exercise but failed to find the benefit or
meaning underlying some obligation? Many things we do don’t
immediately reveal their value. Meaning, much like a terrible guest,
often arrives late, bearing a great bottle of wine. Observant patience
is the key.
If you’re failing to find the purpose of a particular pursuit, keep
an eye on it. Monthly Migration can also be used to monitor
progress. Use it as a milestone to check in with yourself to see if
anything has shifted.
If you finally come to the conclusion that an obligation is adding
no value to your life, or that the effort far outweighs the value it
provides, then you’ve identified a distraction. Let it go. If you can’t
let it go for whatever reason, deconstruct (this page ) your
obligation and figure out your alternatives.
DECONSTRUCTION
What stands in the way becomes the way.
—MARCUS AURELIUS
O ne of the oldest texts known to us is the Enüma Elis. It's a
Babylonian creation myth that pits Marduk, champion of the
gods, against Tiamat, a dragon-like beast, mother to monsters, who
is determined to destroy the gods. It depicts an epic battle to the
death between good and evil, order and chaos. Marduk slays Tiamat
and then proceeds to dismember her body, using the pieces to lay
the foundation for all of creation. Her ribs become the sky, and her
mouth becomes the ocean. Though a bit ghastly, it's a powerful
metaphor for how we can deconstruct our challenges and use them
to our advantage.
When I graduated from college, I was fortunate to get the
internship of my dreams. I double majored in graphic design and
creative writing, and I wanted to combine these skills by working on
title sequences. You know, those micro movies that bookend the
actual film? The internship was working for a man who was
pioneering the resurgence of this art form and whose work was
greatly inspiring.
I moved to New York with two bags and took up residence in a
mildewy basement apartment I could hardly afford, with two
roommates who nabbed the good rooms and a jumpy cat I didn't see
eye to eye with. It was a small price to pay for my new career.
The week before I was scheduled to start, I called the office to get
the final details about the internship. It turned out that because of
the World Trade Center attacks the year before, the company had
downsized. Long story short, I had been laid off before my first day,
and no one had even bothered to tell me. Suddenly I found myself
just another unemployed art student in New York, searching for
work in one of the bleakest job markets in recent history, during
one of the harshest winters in decades.
For many months, I looked fruitlessly for a job. My meager
savings evaporated. On good days, I'd trudge through snow, jam my
portfolio into packed subway cars at rush hour, and thaw while
being interrogated, I mean, interviewed by a bored HR staffer for
some job I was inevitably unqualified for. On bad days, I just sat in
front of the computer applying for any job I could find.
One morning I woke up to a strange sound. I opened my eyes and
noticed the floor was moving—no, the floor was under water! The
snow had melted overnight and had pooled in my bedroom. Floating
by my bed was my portfolio, filled with my design work that I was
using to apply for jobs. My first thought was: At least it's all backed
up . That's when I saw my backup drive submerged on the floor, and
my computer flickering next to it. That morning, I lost nearly
everything I owned.
Shortly thereafter, I accepted the first job I was offered purely to
survive. The job had nothing at all to do with my skill set, but I was
broke and homeless.
In my first week I learned that my predecessors had all run away
screaming, and it quickly dawned on me why. My main function was
to compile backlist order forms, lists of all the books that this
company had published . . . hundreds of thousands of them. Yes, I'm
into lists, but this was a special kind of hell even for me.
There was no solid tech or system to facilitate this process, so
inevitably something somewhere would go wrong and all inky
fingers would point at me. On top of all this, I reported to a wildly
abusive boss who systematically dismantled any confidence or self-
worth I had. She screamed at me so loudly once that people from
adjacent offices came running in because they thought there was a
"situation." It got to the point where I was actually afraid to go to
work. I didn't know how, but something had to change.
Once again, I started interviewing for any position I could find. It
did not go well. The truth was, I had nothing to show for myself. My
portfolio was gone, I had a few random summer internships' worth
of experience, and I was working a job mostly unrelated to my skill
set. I wouldn't have hired me! I swallowed my pride and accepted
the fact that I had to make myself more valuable.
In my proto Bullet Journal, I started mapping out how I was
spending my free time. A fair amount of it was spent online. I
started tracking what I was spending my time looking at and
realized that I was reading and learning about interactive online
experiences. There was a nascent movement of experimental
websites mixing art, photography, video, and design into fascinating
interactive narratives. It was also around the time that personal
websites started popping up, especially for artists, designers, and
small businesses.
Still recovering from the flood, I could deeply appreciate the
benefits of having my work online, far removed from the clutches of
negligent landlords and wet acts of god. Also, it so happened that
several friends had asked if I could build websites for them or the
businesses they worked for. Perhaps there would be some money in
it?
I scraped together whatever remained of my laughable salary and
started taking night classes in the then-new field of ^web design." A
couple of nights a week, I dragged myself to the windowless
classroom, exhausted from my day job, but motivated. For the first
time in a long time, I was working on something that resonated
with me. I learned how to design and code rudimentary websites. I
jumped at any opportunity that presented itself. First I designed a
site for a local restaurant, then another for the restaurant's
bartender's band, and so on. Eventually I was able to scrape up just
enough freelance work to resign and fully focus on an entirely new
career path.
While I can't say I charted this path skillfully or even particularly
willingly, the experience taught me that it's all too easy to start
feeling as if we're being held hostage by our circumstances. Be they
taxes, paying rent, taking care of a sick family member, or paying off
student loans, these are the dragons in our lives. We can cower in
fear, rage against fate, play the martyr, wallow in self-pity, waiting
for the skies to magically part and be rescued—or we can take up
arms.
IN PRACTICE
We have a tendency to blow our problems way out of proportion. No
matter how bad a problem really is, chances are we're making it
much worse in our minds. It can feel all-consuming, making us
believe we're powerless, and helpless, but that's never true. No
matter how bleak or menacing a situation may appear, it does not
entirely own us. It can't take away our freedom to respond, our
power to take action.
Even the smallest action can start changing our circumstances.
The first action can be simply pausing to examine your problem so
you can begin to deconstruct it. To do this, we'll use a technique
known as the Five Whys.
THE FIVE WHYS
Sakichi Toyoda, founder of Toyota and father of the Japanese
industrial revolution, invented this technique to uncover the causes
of technical problems in his company's manufacturing process. It's
a deceptively simple method to unearth root issues and expose
unexpected opportunities. It does this by breaking down a
seemingly large problem into its individual components.
We can use the same approach for tackling our challenges using
our Bullet Journals. Start a new Collection and give it a Topic that
names the problem: *I can't pay rent." Now ask yourself why . Write
down the answer. Now, challenge your answer by asking why again.
Do the same for the next answer, and so on, up to five times.
I CAN'T PAY RENT.
1. Why? Because | don't have the money.
2. Why? Because the rent is high.
3. Why? Because | live in a nice area.
4. Why? Because | like living there.
5. Why? Because the neighborhood has nice people, good shops and restaurants, and
makes me feel safe.
We've now deconstructed one large challenge into its smaller
components, each of which we can target separately. More
importantly, in this example, we also surfaced the underlying values
being threatened by this situation. Often, when deconstructing a
challenge, you'll discover what's truly at stake. In this case, it's not
really about the rent; it's about losing the feeling of pleasure and
safety. These are two important data points that can be used to
inform your plan of attack.
PLAN OF ATTACK
With our list of reasons clearly laid out, the next step is to figure out
what our options are. Naturally, this is done by creating another list.
You can do this on the facing page of your *I can't pay rent"
Collection.
If the issue is that you don't have the money, you can start listing
ways you could tackle that specific issue. A few that come to mind
are:
1. Ask for a raise.
2. Look for a better-paying job.
3. Get a roommate.
4. Move to a different neighborhood where the cost of living is lower.
5. Take continuing education classes to increase your value.
Now we're making some progress! Each entry is a path forward.
Now, with your options clearly laid out before you, pick the one that
excites you the most—the one that shines forth.
Let's say you chose “Take continuing education classes to
increase your value." That's your goal. Flip to the next blank spread
and create a Subcollection dedicated to this goal. With your goal set
up, break it down into actionable steps like research fields of
interest, find different schools offering classes, sign up for a class,
and so on. This is your plan of attack. Each Task you complete is a
successful blow landed in the battle with your dragon.
Life is full of dragons. The longer they live, the bigger they
become, feeding off our misfortunes, resentments, and sense of
helplessness. Stare them down. Look directly into their big, terrible
eyes. There, you will see your own reflection. Our challenges are
mirrors, exposing our vulnerabilities, insecurities, weaknesses, and
fears. As hard as it may be, don't turn away. See them, examine
them, meet your fears with curiosity, and you will discover a way
forward. It's entirely possible that your courage will be rewarded
with opportunities for personal or professional growth that would
have been hidden from you otherwise.
In my case, my dragon was my job. It terrified me. It embodied
all the things I had naively sworn never to subject myself to: a dead-
end job that was not creative in any meaningful way. But I had to
pay my bills, so I took it. I was so caught up in my own misery that I
forgot a simple truth: As long as our hearts are beating, there is
always opportunity.
Finally, after another particularly savage verbal abuse session
from my boss, I'd had enough. I was tired of being a victim, not only
to her, but also to my lesser qualities. I was tired of being the
honored (and only) guest at my personal pity party, tired of the
feeling of helplessness. These miseries were entirely my own doing,
as if enduring this terrible situation made me some kind of a noble
martyr. It was ridiculous and immature. I was just trying to ignore
the fact that the only solution would have to come from me, and no
one else.
It started with setting a goal: Get a new job. When I realized that
that was not going to happen because I didn't have anything to show
for myself, I simply set a new goal: Learn to build websites.
That's when I started using my dragon—my job— against itself.
My meager salary paid for classes. The abuse and meaninglessness
of my position motivated me to drag myself to night school. As hard
as it was, each class felt like a little victory in my battle. Finally, I
was able to land my killing blow, not with a sword, but with a terse
letter of resignation printed on paper warped by the flood.
Now when things are not going my way, or when I need to work
on something that doesn't inspire me to do backflips, I think back to
my Tiamat. I look around and see all the things that I was able to
make from that experience. It forced me to learn how to code, which
led to a fulfilling career as a digital product designer, which provided
the hands-on education I needed to launch Bulletjournal .com,
which ultimately resulted in the privilege to write this book and
share the Bullet Journal with you.
INERTIA
I shall either find a way or make one.
—HANNIBAL BARCA
I n the chapter on Goals (this page ), we talked about breaking
down major challenges into smaller, more manageable Sprints.
But what happens if you get stuck along the way? Maybe you're
hung up on a problem, or you've lost motivation, or you're having a
hard time finding a way forward on a project, goal, or in a
relationship. Whatever the reason may be, you're left feeling
frustrated by the sense of inertia. What to do? Here are two
techniques I've found very useful in getting back some traction.
IN PRACTICE
RUBBER DUCKING
A friend who is a successful small business owner was looking to
open another location. She applied for a loan to finance the buildout
of the new space. Though she already ran three profitable branches,
the bank turned down her request. Understandably upset, she called
her accountant and started walking him through the problem. Piece
by piece she began articulating what she was trying to accomplish.
As she did so, she began to realize that her goal wasn't so much
about opening this specific location as it was about growing her
business. She opted to create five small pop-up shops to test which
location would bring in the most business. This she could afford
without any outside support. She figured out a solution by
explaining the problem.
This process is known as rubber ducking, which originates from
the book The Pragmatic Programmer by Andrew Hunt and David
Thomas. The authors tell the story of a developer who solves
problems in their code by explaining them line by line to a rubber
duck. Yes, I'm talking about the small yellow bath toy.
We're apt to lose our objectivity when we're spinning our wheels.
By explaining a problem in detail to someone (or something) else,
we're forced to change our perspective, viewing it from above, so to
speak, and not from the depths of whatever mental hole we've dug
ourselves into.
If no one's around to listen, you can sit down with your Bullet
Journal and write a letter to "Dear Duck”—or some other benign,
trusted, or accepting entity. Tell them about:
e Your problem
e What's not working
e Why it isn’t working
e What you've tried
e What you have not tried yet
e What you want to have happen
The important part is getting it out of your head. Craft your
explanation with care and patience. Do so with the understanding
that this entity may not have all the information that you do. Good
communication bridges the gap between information and
understanding. In the process of carefully communicating the
problem, you may help yourself figure out a solution. And if a letter
to your rubber duck, padded panda, stupid stapler, or, God forbid,
Chad doesn’t do the trick, we can try something else...
BREAK-SPRINTS
If you’ve been following along in sequence, at this point you should
have a “Goals” Collection set up. This Collection can serve as a
powerful inspirational resource when you're feeling stuck or
unmotivated. I know, I know, I had mentioned earlier not to revisit
your “Goals” Collection until you're done with the ones you're
working on, but this is an emergency! When you're really stuck or
out of ideas, it usually means that you've lost perspective. You may
no longer be able to see a way forward because you're too close to
the subject. To regain some perspective, it can help to temporarily
disengage your mind by focusing on something else. To that end,
we'll create what I like to call a break-sprint.
Much like the Sprints (this page ) we covered earlier in the book,
break-sprints are self-contained micro projects. They're designed for
the sole purpose of helping your mind get unstuck. A break-sprint
can be set up in your Bullet Journal the same way as a standard
Sprint, but it follows a subtly different set of rules:
1. It should take two weeks or less to complete. You need a
break, but you don't want to lose the thread of your main
project.
2. It should be unrelated to the project/problem that's
troubling you. You and your main project need space. You're
not breaking up, but you're taking some much-needed *me
time."
3. Very critically, it needs to have a defined end (and a
clear beginning and middle, too). When we feel stuck, our
sense of inertia drains our motivation. One goal of your break-
sprint is to give you the satisfaction of crossing off the final
Task, of feeling that sense of accomplishment and closure.
Reminding yourself what that feels like can quickly refuel your
drive.
BREAK-SPRINT
"PARE DOWN CLOTHES"
BREAKING IT DOWN
SPRINT
l
Block out time on calendar
Buy garbage bags
Pull all clothes out of storage
Take everything out of closets
Sort into keep, toss, donate
Toss
Donate
Restock closet
Take that online class, write that article, organize your digital
photo gallery, KonMari your closet, volunteer with your colleagues.
It's entirely up to you. Just make sure it's something you're curious
about.
By the end of your break-sprint, you'll have been exposed to
something new. You will have used your mind in a different way, to
have thoughts you would not have had otherwise. Every new
experience helps us grow and grants us new perspective. You'll be
ever so slightly different than you were the last time you tried to
tackle the challenge that had you feeling stuck. And that can make
all the difference.
IMPERFECTION
There is a crack in everything, that's how the light gets in.
—LEONARD COHEN
T he holiday festivities had long passed, leaving the usually
crowded New York streets empty. It was as though the city had
gone into mass hibernation, bracing itself against the mirthless
stretch of winter ahead.
My then-partner and I had been going through a rough patch, so
I decided to plan a romantic stay-at-home date night for us. I had
tracked down that bottle of wine we'd enjoyed at our favorite place
that had since been shuttered. On the menu was handmade sweet
potato gnocchi. I had never made it before, but I knew she loved it.
How hard could it be?
Turns out, really hard. Naturally everything went comically
wrong from the get-go, and I had to start over from scratch ... a few
times. I spent hours baffled by the recipe, my face as contorted as
the potatoes. As the hours passed, I grew increasingly irritable and
frantic. The image of her coming home to a perfectly dressed table,
flickering candles, with music softly playing in the background was
going up in smoke.
By the skin of my teeth, I got it done. She walked in, saw the
table, dropped all her bags, and jumped into my arms, burying her
cold face in my chest. When she looked up at me, her huge smile
faded a little and she asked me what was wrong. “Nothing,” I replied
sullenly, dusting flour off my pants.
We sat down and she went on about how amazing everything
was, but I was too busy brooding over all the mistakes I had made
preparing the meal. This was undercooked, that was too cold . ..I
was comparing what was with what I had hoped would be: that
perfect image in my mind. The only thing I failed to see was how
enchanted she was by the gesture and how that joy slowly drained
as I kept harping on about what I could have done better. I managed
to spoil the most important ingredient of the dinner: our time
together. All because I wanted everything to be perfect.
Perfection is an unnatural and damaging concept. I say unnatural
because as far as I'm able to tell, there is not a single thing in the
physical world, when examined closely enough, that fully adheres to
our own definition of perfection: that which is faultless and cannot
be improved upon. Even our standards of measurement don't
comply. For example, the International Prototype of the Kilogram,
more affectionately known as Le Grand K (it was created in France),
was the physical object that set the standard of one of the most
widely used measurements of weight in the world. Duplicates were
shipped around the globe for other countries to use as their
standard. It turned out that over time these "perfect" objects had
individually changed in mass. For a standard of weight, that's a
critical problem. After all, a perfect absolute should not be able to
change. That's why, these days, such standards are expressed in
terms of equations and concepts.
Now you may fire back and say, “What about me getting 100
percent on my math test? That's a perfect score!" Sure, your
answers may have been correct, but were the questions? What was
the point of the test? Was it a perfect way of assessing your ability?
No, tests are approximations at best. There are plenty of people who
test well yet perform poorly. There are even more who test poorly
but perform well.
One could argue that perfection only exists in the intangible
concepts, theories, and beliefs used to define the ideal, the
permanent, and the divine. Why am I belaboring this point?
Because the idea of perfection all too often sabotages our ability to
become who we have the potential to be.
We're marvelous yet imperfect creatures—and few things make
this as clear as inventing unattainable standards to hold ourselves
to. So our aspirations often wither on the vine because of our
inability to live up to the misguided ideals we hold for our bodies,
our minds, our achievements, and our relationships.
Failing to be perfect is one of our biggest sources of self-loathing.
It's intentionality gone bad, where we spend time and energy
undoing our progress. We tear up our plans, recommit to
counterproductive behaviors, and empower our inner critic.
The big misconception is that the alternative to perfection is
failure. Mercifully, life isn't binary; it exists on a spectrum. On one
side, we have the unattainable: perfection. On the opposite side, we
find the unavoidable: chaos. All of the beauty that exists in the
world hangs in the balance.
In Japan, there is the term wabi-sabi . Wabi-sabi posits that the
beauty of an object is found in its imperfection. In direct contrast to
the Western perspective, which tends to conflate perfection with
beauty, wabi-sabi celebrates transience, individuality, and the
flawed nature of a thing. These are the qualities that make it
unique, genuine, and beautiful. The cracks in the pot, the warp in
the wood, the leaves on the stone, the spatter of the ink. It mirrors
the Buddhist philosophies, in which wisdom comes from making
peace with our fallible natures.
Embracing our imperfection puts the emphasis back where it
should be: continual improvement. This mind-set turns mistakes
from land mines into street signs, pointing us toward where we
need to go.
By celebrating transience, the universal changing
nature of all things, wabi-sabi champions a forgiving
path with limitless opportunities to progress.
IN PRACTICE
PRACTICING IMPERFECTION
Now, you may be thinking, I'm all too aware of how human I am; I
don't need any more practice in imperfection . It's not about
making mistakes on purpose; it's about reframing your response to
them. In meditation, the goal, so far as there can be one, is to be
present. By disentangling ourselves from our thoughts, we can view
them objectively. Easier said than done.
Even the most experienced practitioners are consumed by their
thoughts from time to time. The key is realizing that you're stuck in
a thought, and pulling yourself back out of it. More so, it's to
perceive the wanderings of your mind not as a mistake, but as an
opportunity. Each time you come back into the present, you ever so
slightly strengthen your ability to focus. In this way, you begin to
embrace a flaw with curiosity instead of judgment.
Are you the type of person who strives to have a perfect
notebook? Maybe you don't have great handwriting, or you lack the
artistic ability to make your notebook pretty. Does that matter?
Only if you want it to. You could look at your notebook as the
evidence of your imperfections, or you could look at it as a
testament to your courage. Those crooked lines and rough letters
paint a picture of someone striving to learn and make a positive
change in their life. It may not be perfect, but it's unquestionably
beautiful.
Do you abandon notebooks when you make a mistake or get a
false start? If so, try creating an “Imperfection Collection."
Somewhere in your notebook, dedicate space where you just. let. go.
Maybe start by writing your name with your nondominant hand.
Scribble, doodle, whatever you like. Do what you fear would make
your notebook feel flawed. Does it make your Bullet Journal any
less valuable? No. One could argue that now it's one of a kind.
Whenever you find yourself obsessing over getting every little thing
perfect, remind yourself it's just a tool. It's what you're building that
counts.
By accepting that we can't be perfect and that we will
fail, we can get back to work.
GOOD CHANGE
Isn't self-improvement or personal development striving for
perfection? It depends on the goal you set. Rather than aiming for
perfection or striving to be better than others, find opportunities to
continually improve yourself. As W. L. Sheldon purportedly wrote:
“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true
nobility is being superior to your former self."
To fully appreciate wabi-sabi as a model for personal growth, it
helps to look a little closer at the culture it originated in. The
Japanese have a long history of elevating craftsmanship to
mystifying levels, be it carpentry, metalsmithing, even product
packaging. Great emphasis was placed on mastery rather than on
perfection. Mastery, unlike perfection, embraces both transience
and imperfection, because it is a process, a state of being, not an end
goal. It is the continued result of improvement and learning. Author
Malcolm Gladwell, citing Daniel Levitin, famously described the
10,000-hour rule, which states that 10,000 hours of deliberate
practice is required to become world-class at anything. 5 Japanese
apprenticeships could span a lifetime.
Mastery replaces the notion of perfection with aspiring to better
ourselves through dedication and practice. When it comes to skill,
there can be no fixed point. Even the greatest masters remain avid
students. Their skill, like our own, develops over time. They all
started somewhere, and chances are their first efforts were just as
clumsy as any of ours would be.
Every day, ask yourself small questions. Figure out some way in
which you can improve. Then format the answer as a Task or Goal
and log it in your Bullet Journal. Each task completed is experience
gained. Keep track of your progress. This way you'll be more likely
to actually take action.
Every action is a step up from where you were. It doesn't matter
how small the steps are, or if you stumble along the way. What
matters is that you continue to step up.
IV
THE ART
THE ART
I recently took a terrible capoeira class. For those unfamiliar with
the term, capoeira is a martial art invented by Brazilian slaves
that cloaked its martial intent behind dance-like movements that
mingle acrobatics, contortionism, sing-along, and the tightly wound
intensity of tango. When "playing," two capoeiristas fluidly whirl
around each other's bodies, often deploying gravity-defying
handstands and flips. The modern break-dancers and urban runners
whose videos you can see on YouTube liberally appropriate
movements from capoeira. In short, it's an impressive and
bewildering thing to behold, and more than a little mind - and
body-bending to do.
I sloshed my way through a tropical downpour to get to the leaky
jungle hangar where the class was being held. Only four of us
washed up in the rain—yours truly, one other student, and two very
stoned capoeira teachers. They mumbled through some
introduction and asked us if we had any experience. My fellow
student admitted she had never heard of capoeira before that
morning. The not-so-dynamic duo looked at each other uncertainly
and then started sluggishly demonstrating seemingly random
movements. My fellow student and I awkwardly stood there,
uncertain what we were supposed to do.
When it finally dawned on the instructors to—you know—
instruct , they asked us to imitate their movements. Because they
had failed to provide us with any context, these movements felt,
well, ridiculous. To the untrained eye, a lot of these basic forms look
like the movements of an enthusiastic drunk looking for their
dropped keys. Well, at least that's what I looked like. It wasn't until
the end of class, when the teachers finally played with each other,
linking all the movements into a cohesive and beautiful sequence,
that the pieces finally, literally, came together. It turned out we had
learned a lot in the two hours we were there, but we didn't realize it
without putting all the pieces into play—into context.
We've covered a lot of ground so far in this book, and there are a
lot of pieces whirling around. You may be feeling a little bit like I
did in capoeira class, staring at something you don't quite know
what to make of. So I want to make sure that, unlike them, I
contextualize how the system and the practice come together.
You may have heard this saying before: "Give a man a fish, and
you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a
lifetime." In the Bullet Journal method, the system is the rod. The
practice provides the line and the lure. They're two separate parts
that can only be fully appreciated when you see them come
together. A powerful way to experience this, and deepen your
understanding, is by learning how to customize and design your
own Collections.
Designing your own Collections shows you how to make BuJo
your own. In the process, you put into practice all of the elements
we've covered in this book so far. It's part organization, part soul-
searching, part dream-weaving. These ingredients, when combined
mindfully, will allow you to continuously reshape your Bullet
Journal into a tool that can help you do far more than just order
your chaos. It's here where we can truly leverage the flexibility of
this methodology to chart a path toward what shines forth with
intention.
One thing that keeps bringing me back to the Bullet Journal—
what allows it to remain relevant after all these years—is how it
continues to adapt to my changing needs. Your Bullet Journal can
become whatever you need it to be. Figuring out what you need it to
be, how it can best serve you, is part of this practice, and it will
change over time.
In this part of the book, we'll examine how to go about doing that
by working on a project that requires us to consider different kinds
of content. It will allow us to explore different ways of using the
Bullet Journal to tackle challenges, deconstruct them, and design
custom layouts—or templates—that will help us organize a plan of
action.
Rather than being prescriptive, these chapters serve to highlight
considerations that I hope will prove useful as you set out to make a
Bullet Journal of your own.
Caveat
As exciting as it can be to dive into customization, if you're new to
Bullet Journaling, I suggest holding off on implementing your own
more complex Collections until you're comfortable using what
you've learned in Parts II and III. I recommend at least two to three
months of basic Bullet Journaling before you start experimenting
with your Collections. It's important that you feel comfortable with
the day-to-day features of the methodology before you start
augmenting it. If you're just getting started, this section is intended
to provide a glimpse of how you'll be able to greatly extend the
functionality of your Bullet Journals when you're ready.
Every tool and technique that I've introduced so far serves a
purpose both on its own and as part of a whole. The Bullet Journal
method is a productivity ecosystem of different techniques and
philosophies. Each helps the rest flourish. Before you introduce a
new species, I urge you to better understand the local population.
Once you do, you'll improve your chances of customizing your
Bullet Journal practice so that it will bear fruit.
KEY CONCEPTS
Extend your BuJo with Custom Collections
Your Bullet Journal can become anything you need it to be.
Figuring out what you need it to be is part of the practice. A
simple guideline is. . .
Custom Collections should serve a purpose
Make sure that the Collections you maintain are adding
value to your life. Productivity is about carefully investing
your time. If you find yourself struggling. . .
BR
VALUE
Define your motivations
Before you figure out how to best do something, clarify why
you're doing it in the first place.
Study your effort
Each Collection is an attempt to learn. It's important to
study your Collections, both the ones that worked as well
as the ones that didn't, to see what you can take for the
next round.
@C
Iterate not only what you're
working on, but how you're
working on it!
Function over form
Your notebook does not have to be beautiful to be valuable. Design should always serve
a purpose. If it also happens to be beautiful, great! As long as it does not get in the way.
— VO
Future-proof your design
Your notebooks tell the story of your life. Make sure your designs
make that story easy to follow, both today and years from now.
Community
One of the most valuable resources of the Bullet Journal is
its community. It’s contributed countless examples and
applications. If you're stuck, or need inspiration, search
"bá
your favorite social network for: o) c?
#bulletjournal or #bujo
| LN
VY &
learn to share,
share to learn
CUSTOM COLLECTIONS
Content precedes design. Design in the absence of content is not design, it's decoration.
—JEFFREY ZELDMAN
T he Bullet Journal's four core Collections (Index, Future Log,
Monthly Log, and Daily Log) will serve you well in most cases.
That said, Bullet Journal embraces the fact that one size does not fit
all. What if you need to keep track of something in a way that's not
presented in this book? This is where Custom Collections come in.
A Custom Collection is designed to serve a specific
need.
It can be as simple as a shopping list or as complicated as a long-
term project. Creating Custom Collections is a creative, enjoyable,
and rewarding aspect of Bullet Journaling because you're
empowering yourself to solve your own challenges!
Whereas the Daily Log is designed as a catchall, Custom
Collections should serve a specific purpose. Avoid being an
information hoarder! I've been guilty of this myself, creating
Collections to track the TV shows I've watched, restaurants I've
patronized, and other minutiae. I call these “junk drawer"
Collections. There's nothing wrong with tracking what you're doing
in a Collection, as long as you plan to do something constructive
with the information. An aspiring filmmaker might want to track
films she's seen as part of her education: Am I saturating myself
with thrillers and not studying comedy? Someone who continually
falls off the exercise wagon might track workout data and fitness
milestones as a way to monitor and encourage continued progress—
or spot trends where he falters. (Holidays? Those monthly poker
nights? After yet another blind date gone bad?) Junk drawer
Collections, in contrast, have limited longevity because they don't
provide insight.
If there's nothing to be learned from the information
in a Collection, it provides little value, and chances
are you ll lack the incentive needed to maintain it.
Don't waste your time tending Collections that won't
add value to your life.
Three Key Sources for Custom Collections
1. Goals
Goals are important, because they (should) hold the promise of
meaning, providing direction and purpose. They also tend to be
complex, involving a lot of moving parts. Custom Collections can
help us deconstruct a goal into its elements so we can tackle them
one at a time.
2. Challenges
Is there some part of your life that's consistently making you feel
angry, anxious, overwhelmed, or self-critical? Once you've figured
out what the challenge is, creating a Custom Collection tailored to
address said challenge can prove very useful. It provides a dedicated
space that helps you gather and clarify your thoughts so that you
can focus on developing a solution and tracking your progress.
3. Tasks
Many Collections begin their life posing as simple Tasks, like “ «
Plan vacation!" During the course of your Daily Reflections (this
page ), you may identify Tasks harboring a warren of other Tasks.
The *Plan vacation" Task, for example, has many moving parts. Left
as a singular action item, it will feel overwhelming, which puts it at
risk of becoming an object of procrastination and a source of
anxiety. Planning a vacation should be a cause for excitement, not
angst. So let's choose that for our Custom Collection project.
Quick sidenote, speaking of planning vacations: Studies suggest
that looking forward to fun events we planned, like trips, can
function as an effective method to elevate our mood and sense of
well-being. °° It's not the trip so much as the anticipation leading up
to the trip that can prove both motivational and uplifting. This can
be especially helpful when we're working our way through an
otherwise challenging time. Through planning, we're setting a
course for what shines forth and basking in the glow as we make
our way there.
First Steps
To begin this project, let's start by creating our first Collection. So
we flip to our next blank spread and add the project Topic: *Hawaii
Vacation." That sounds like a lovely alternative to Brooklyn, which
as I write this is being blanketed in snow by yet another whopping
nor'easter...on the first day of spring no less.
Brainstorm
I like to kick off every project in my notebook by using the first
pages of my Collection for Brainstorming. These pages are dedicated
to capturing initial thoughts, no matter what form they take, be they
single words, images, mind maps, etc. This spread is here for you to
unload your ideas, get excited, and see what you can shake loose
through free association.
But sometimes we're so welded to our day-to-day (both in our
doing and in our thinking) that this kind of blue-skying can actually
be daunting, making it hard to know where to begin. If that's you,
keep reading.
Examine Your Motivations
When creating a Collection for a project—be it writing a book,
redoing the basement, or planning a vacation—a good place to start
is by examining our motivation. Why are we taking on this project?
What need does it address? To have more quality family time? To
relax and refresh through surfing and/or forest bathing? Whatever
it is, it'S okay. We're asking just to get the wheels turning so we can
unearth the underlying cause of our motivation.
Why is getting at the underlying cause so important? Motivation
doesn't exist in a vacuum. It results from our pain, frustration, or
desire. Whatever the case may be, we need to surface it before we
can assure that our efforts aren't misdirected. By identifying our
true motivations, we increase the potential impact of our actions.
In other words, understanding why you feel
compelled to do something will help you better define
how to do something.
As noted earlier, our first opportunity to clarify our intention is
when we pause to consider a Topic name that captures the essence
of what this project is about. Sometimes, though, we need a little
more detail than that. In times like these, it can help to write out a
brief mission statement to define why we're doing something, what
we hope to get out of the experience, and how we will go about
doing it. You can even use this script if it's helpful:
| want to [what] so that | can [why] by [how].
So in this case, the mission statement could be:
| want to go on vacation so that | can relax by not being in the office.
Now, while there's nothing wrong with this mission statement,
digging a little deeper could help you uncover how this trip could
connect with something meaningful to you. After all, you don't need
to travel to be out of the office. What is it about this trip that really
excites you? We can use the Five Whys (this page ) to help us here.
1. Why do you want to go on vacation? To relax.
2. Why? Because work is stressing me out and depressing me.
3. Why? Because it's the same thing day in and day out, and it
makes me feel lonely.
4. Why? Because my life is confined to my cubicle and my couch,
and I don't get to see the people I care about.
5. Why? Because I don't take time for those things.
We've now identified various pain points that we can begin to
tackle. Let's start by highlighting some key themes that have
surfaced: confinement, boredom, depression, loneliness, and guilt.
These are the likely sources of your motivation. The goal for this
vacation would then be to alleviate those pain points by
experiencing their opposites: freedom, excitement, joy, connection,
and pride. Let's rephrase our mission statement to address these
desires:
| want to go
getl el cate about and nection) wi vaa
This simple exercise not only helped us figure out our priorities
for our trip, but also gave us some food for thought that we can
address later on, when we're calm and tan. Also, keep in mind that
this technique can be applied to any project of your choosing. For
example:
Ok so that | can
hool so that | can help people by learning how to treat illness
Feel free to create your own script. Just make sure it helps you
dig into your motivation and expose what's most important to you
about your venture. Later, when you're in the thick of the process,
your mission statement can help remind you of what your priorities
are, functioning as a compass if and when you need it.
Writing down this mission statement is also a great way to ^wake
the page." That's the term I use to describe the act of marking the
page for the first time. It's the moment when thought transcends
the distance between our inner and outer world, and we breathe life
into our ideas. Beginning can be the hardest part. What better way
to wake the page than by stating what you want? Don't overthink it;
just write down what you feel. It's not a contract. It's just a
benevolent way to nudge yourself over the starting line.
DESIGN
A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but
when there is nothing left to take away.
—ANTOINE DE SAINT -EXUPERY
I f you've searched for “bullet journal” or “BuJo” online, you may
have seen the elaborately illustrated interpretations people have
created. They're gorgeous—motivating to some, but intimidating to
many others. People assume they can’t Bullet Journal because
they’re not artists or because their handwriting is too sloppy. Allow
me to lay those concerns to rest. The only thing that matters in
BuJo is the content, not the presentation. If you can elevate both,
then my hat’s off to you. But the only artistic skill required is the
ability to draw straightish lines. If you can manage that, then you'll
be fine. As Bullet Journalist Timothy Collinson says: “I must have
the plainest, most minimal style of Bullet Journaling you could
imagine, as I'm no artist and calligraphy is a dream beyond the
horizon. But I can honestly say it's been life changing."
The goal when designing our Collections is to maximize their
functionality, legibility, and sustainability. In this chapter I want to
delve into each, and share some considerations that may prove
helpful when you set out to design your own.
Functionality
Dieter Rams, the industrial designer behind some of the most iconic
radios, shavers, and numerous other household objects (some of
which are rumored to have inspired the design of the original iPod),
used to say wenniger aber besser , which loosely translates into
"less, but better." It's one of the guiding principles underlying the
Bullet Journal method, and it's reflected in the design. Form should
never obscure function. Distill your design down to the essential so
that you're only focusing on what is meaningful. If you find
beautifying your notebook is essential to maintaining your
motivation and productivity, then have at it. Just remember,
collections are tools that are meant to help you progress toward
your goals, not stand in their way.
Collections should always favor function over form.
It's how well a Collection helps you execute its
underlying goal that matters.
This is not only true for the design of the templates, but also for
the information they contain, like weight, time, distance, names,
events, etc. Habit trackers, for example, are Collections designed to
help form new behaviors by tracking progress for things like
reading, meditating, exercise, water consumed throughout the day,
etc. Because there are so many things we could be doing better,
there's a temptation to get a little overenthusiastic at first, taking on
way too much at a time. Try to avoid tracking six habits
simultaneously. This can quickly become overwhelming,
burdensome, and demotivating. It will take a lot of time to
maintain, and the probability of failing to form a half dozen new
habits at the same time is high. Track only the habits that you feel
most strongly about now. Be cool. Be selective. As Herr Rams
suggests: Start with less, but do it better. You can always add more
later. Keep the content of your Collections focused on your
priorities.
Another solid measure of a Collection's functionality is how
future-proof it is. A well-designed Collection will remain
informative long after it has served its purpose. I've created a lot of
Collections that made sense at the time, but looking back on them, I
couldn't follow my thinking anymore. A great exercise to ensure the
longevity of your layout is to design your templates in a way that a
stranger could easily understand what they're looking at. To be
clear, I'm not suggesting that you share your journal with someone
else! It's just that our future selves may want to repurpose an
effective Collection one day, so let's make it as easy as we can for
them to remember how and why it worked.
Your Collections should be as helpful to you in
retrospect as they are in real time.
Every new iteration of your templates should undergo some
scrutiny. What worked? What didn't? What little thing can I change
to make this work better for me? By keeping your templates lean, it
becomes easier to identify opportunities for functional
improvement. Keep it simple. Keep it focused. Keep it relevant.
Legibility
Our handwriting is a uniquely revealing form of self expression,
often reflecting our inner state. It swells with joy and deteriorates
with stress, sometimes to a point where it becomes hard to
decipher. Perhaps it was never great to begin with. We take it for
granted that we're stuck with the cards we're dealt, but even
something as ingrained as our handwriting can greatly benefit from
a little attention.
If you struggle with legibility, try experimenting with alternate
types of lettering and/or writing instruments. You may be surprised
at how well your handwriting responds to even the subtlest of
changes. For example, I found that writing in all caps with fineliner
pens solved two legibility problems: It forced me to be more
deliberate in shaping letters and to be more economical with my
word choices. Though awkward at first, this intentional change
ended up pardoning many a passable idea formerly condemned to
my cursive hieroglyphics.
Use this as an excuse to dip your toe into the pen and ink world.
It's rich with elegance, heritage, and history, bringing to bear
hundreds of years of knowledge of how to lay ink onto paper. From
fountain to felt-tip pens, there is a lot to explore. Chances are, you'll
find something that will help improve your skill or, at the very least,
your appreciation for handwriting. Just be careful not to let your
quest for the perfect pen or paper get in the way of your writing.
Your pen is not a wand, it's just a tool. It's you who brings the magic
to the page.
Legibility is not just about what we put on the page, it's also
about what we leave off. Claude Debussy once said that music is the
space between notes. *” In graphic design, that space is imaginatively
referred to as ^white space." It's not an afterthought, it's a very
deliberate element used to increase focus, structure, and clarity.
Give your designs room to breathe. In order for your templates to
remain legible, they should tend away from density. Play with scale,
add more space—or padding—to text, table cells, or list items.
Sometimes that means less fits on a page. That's fine. How we
frame our information will go a long way toward increasing
legibility, comprehension, and our sanity. We only make room for
what matters.
Sustainability
Maintaining Collections takes time and energy, so it's important to
make sure they're worth the commitment. Every Collection that
you've learned about so far was a solution to a specific challenge.
The Index (this page ) resulted from the frustration of not being
able to locate content in my notebook. The Monthly Log (this page )
came about in response to wanting to have an overview of
responsibilities and time. These and the others have proved
valuable time and time again, easily earning the attention required
to maintain them.
You want to make sure that maintaining a Collection doesn't feel
like a chore. Most accounts of people falling off the Bullet Journal
wagon turn out to be people who spent too much time decorating
their pages. There's nothing wrong with decoration—unless it
becomes a drag. That means the balance is off; if you don't feel the
reward is worth the effort, simplify.
The good news is that you'll naturally be able to weed out
unsustainable Collections during your Monthly or Yearly Migration.
If you haven't updated a given Collection, you'll know that it's not
adding much value to your life. It's okay to let it go. It’s not a
failure; it's a valuable lesson that can be applied to future template
designs. You need to learn how something doesn't work in order to
design something that will. Be sure your frustration or
disappointment doesn't rob you of that opportunity.
A key part of Bullet Journaling is learning what you're curious
about and what you naturally gravitate toward. Evaluating your
Collections during Migration quickly reveals what kinds of things
actually hold your attention and what you struggle with. You can
learn a lot by how frequently you update a Collection. This is not
only true for your actions, but also for the way you organize your
thoughts. Over time, you'll figure out what layouts help you think
more clearly, be more focused, and allow you to make meaningful
progress. Not only are you becoming more intentional about what
you're doing, but also how you're doing it. This is how Bullet
Journal helps you learn how to design your own tools for continual
improvement.
PLANNING
If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail!
—BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
Y ou can't plan your way out of failure, but you can greatly
increase the odds of success by doing a little legwork before you
dive into your project. Whether planning a trip to Hawaii, a website
relaunch, or a presentation, you'll ensure the best use of your time
and resources if you pause to define what the parameters and
variables are before figuring out how to structure a plan of action.
Professional cooks have all their ingredients prepped and laid out
well before they start to assemble their plates. The vegetables are
chopped, garnishes minced, the surfaces are cleaned. This is known
as the mise en place , or mise (rhymes with *cheese"), which is
French for “putting in place." This practice allows the cook to focus
on what's important: assembling the meal. In your Bullet Journal,
you're the chef.
Collections, like meals, are the sum of their parts. In order to
design a meaningful Collection, you need to define the "ingredients
you have to work with. Depending on what you're working on, these
ingredients take the form of values like sessions, weight, distance,
etc. Your Collection will be designed to clearly store and order these
values.
Let's map this onto our “Hawaii Vacation" Collection. While
we're brainstorming, we'll identify various pieces of information—
ingredients, if you will—that need to be sorted and put in place. We
do this by asking ourselves small questions, like Where do I want to
go? What do I want to do? When do I want to go? And what 's my
»
budget? We can repurpose these questions to define categories like
Destinations, Activities, Time, and Budget. Right after your
Brainstorm spread, list these categories out along with their
considerations, so you can start to structure the framework for your
project (this page ).
Now we have our list of all the things we need to consider. We
can create Subcollections in our Bullet Journal to tackle each
individually. Let's start with Destinations, because it will require the
most research.
Research
Every undertaking is full of unknowns, but doing your homework
can go a long way in helping you overcome one of the most
challenging phases of any endeavor: getting started. First of all, it
eases you into the project by simply becoming more familiar with
the landscape. The more aware we are of what to expect, the less
we'll end up fumbling about when we get there. This may seem
obvious, but a lot of people begin their big project with a dramatic
gesture or proclamation with no idea what they're up against.
Though the effort
may be commendable, it may also be short-lived, quickly
succumbing to entirely avoidable problems.
VACATION TO HAWAII
MISSION STATEMENT
"| want to go on vacation so that | can remind myself what I’m working for by spending
quality time with people | care about while we have fun exploring a tropical place
together."
DESTINATIONS
— Where do | want to go in Hawaii?
ACTIVITIES
— What do | want to do?
— What do my travel companions like to do?
TIME
— Vacation days available
— Flight time
— Local commute time
— Activities duration
BUDGET
— Flight
— Car rental
— Lodging
— Gas
— Food
— Activities
Let's say you want to become a vegetarian. With a bit of research
and planning, you'll know how to stock your fridge and how to
prepare, say, a week's worth of tasty meals to get you started. That
way you don't hit day one of your new life with an empty fridge, an
empty stomach, and an empty plate—unless you count hefty
helpings of frustration, discouragement, and overwhelm, which you
wash down with a steak burrito of shame. As we've discussed,
overwhelm can quickly drain us of our motivation and excitement.
We can mitigate this by educating ourselves ahead of time.
On the flip side, be careful not to fall down the research rabbit
hole. Educating ourselves can be fun and feel productive, but for
some it becomes a way to avoid getting on with the process. The
longer you research, the more options you will surface, which can
also be overwhelming. We want to avoid this infamous “analysis
paralysis." We need to research, but we also need to make progress.
How do we do both, in the proper proportions? This is where time
boxing (this page ) comes into play.
Time boxing will give you both a starting and an end point to
your research sessions, providing the structured space needed for
exploration. Some people like to set a timer during their research
sessions to help them focus and keep from being sucked into the
black hole of the internet.
When you're figuring out your research time slot, also limit the
number of total sessions you have available. For example, when
planning your trip to Hawaii, one of your first Tasks is to research
its several islands to determine which you want to travel to. Each
island offers a lot of different exciting things to explore. To prevent
your research from turning into its own form of distraction, allot
yourself something like two 30-minute research sessions per island,
and block it out on your calendar. If you need more time, that's fine,
just quarantine your research so that the sessions remain
productive and finite.
The first thing you want to do during your initial research session
is to create your *Destinations" Subcollection. On the first page,
we'll list out all of the islands we have to choose from for reference.
Each following page will focus on one specific island, listing the
activities that would warrant a trip to that island. Is it the amazing
volcano hikes? The great surfing? The villages where you can
meander? For now, don't think of how (How will I afford it? How
would I get there? Where would I stay? ); we'll get to that in a bit.
First, focus on finding what would best support your mission
statement, the reason for this trip.
Just as the moves of the capoeira instructors I mentioned earlier
made little sense without context, so, too, will taking action without
planning. Without a plan, action tends to result in wasted motion,
energy, and time, often culminating in the disappointment of
failure. Yes, I realize that our project example is “just” a vacation,
but it's our precious investment of time, energy, and hard-earned
money. Why not make the most out of it?
LISTS
S ince we're working with various types of data in our vacation
project (dates, times, dollars, etc.), we can optimize each type of
content by tailoring layouts to best support their function. Your
budget and your itinerary, for example, serve two very different
purposes, so why should they share the same design?
The most basic template is the list. Lists provide an effective,
convenient way to organize content and are simple to create. They
allow us to capture information quickly by encouraging us to keep
our entries short and to the point. Few design conventions can do so
much with so little. It's why the list is the core design pattern in the
Bullet Journal.
Let's take a look at a list detailing all the fun activities we found
researching Mauna Kea, one of the Hawaiian islands (this page ). In
an ideal world, we would have time to enjoy everything on our list,
but alas, we don't. Lists can quickly become bloated and
overwhelming, so in this chapter we explore some quick ways to
curate our lists so they remain focused and manageable.
MAUNA KEA
* The Emerald Pools
The Lava Fields
** Volcanic Forest
Wild Stingray Beach
** Night Market
Moonoa Yoga School
Black Sand Beach
Green Sand Beach
Turtle Beach
Volcano Beach
Prioritizing
When we're drafting a list, like the one for our vacation, we're just
gathering data: This sounds like fun or that seems important, and so
on. We get caught up in the capture, which is fine as long as the list
serves a purpose. Once our list is more or less complete, it's time to
take a step back and reflect on it. Which items excite you? Which
don't? Weigh each entry on a mental scale and take a first pass
using the “*” Signifier to prioritize the items you feel strongest
about or are the most time sensitive, and strike off the items you
feel “meh” about. We're not here to design a lukewarm life.
Lastly, there's often a human element that we need to consider
while we prioritize. In this case, if you're traveling with others, then
a good place to start culling your list is by considering your
companions’ allergies, likes, dislikes, etc. It's not necessarily about
sacrificing what you want to do, but it can quickly tip the scales for
options that you're hung up on: black or green sand beach?
Everyone else has seen black? Green it is!
Context
In the previous example, you'll see the list of all the exciting things
that seem fun to do on Mauna Kea, our hypothetical Hawaiian
vacation. That's a good start, but this list doesn't really provide a lot
of context. It's like being at a restaurant where everything on the
menu looks great. It's not until we see the prices, ingredients, and
calorie counts that we quickly narrow down our options. Context
provides information that will help us prioritize. To that end, let's
add some parameters to our list that will help facilitate our
decision-making by adding some context: location, time, and cost.
I added the time “T” column so that I don't show up somewhere
just to realize it's closed on Wednesdays because Big Sammy, the
owner, in his infinite rational wisdom, decided Wednesdays are not
for working . It's happened. Noting opening and closing times also
provides context as you schedule your days.
I've denoted location (in the *L" column) by *N" for north, *S" for
south, ^E" for east, “W” for west, and “C” for central. This helps me
understand roughly where my points of interest are in relationship
to one another so I can make better decisions about efficient
commuting and lodging. (I don't know about you, but I'd rather
spend more time being places than getting there.) Noting the
locations also provides a nice menu of nearby fallback options
should a given activity not pan out.
The cost “$” column is pretty self-explanatory. Including prices
serves as a data point we can later use to edit down our list once
we've determined our budget. To be clear, just because something is
expensive does not mean it needs to be taken off our list. It's simply
information we can later use to help facilitate our choices.
Mauna Kea
* The Emerald Pools
The Lava Fields
¥ Volcanic Forest
Wild Stingray Beach
Turtle Beach
X Night Market
Moonoa Yoga School
Black Sand Beaeh
Green Sand Beach
Surfboard rental
Surfboard rental 2
Mult
M-T / 8-4
n
124
10/hr
Invariably a lot of options on our list will remain for now because
they all seem fun. That's okay. As we progress through our
planning, we'll revisit our list and filter the items through new
considerations surfaced by the other Collections we'll set up later.
As with all the core Collections, your Custom Collections can
influence each other. To better understand this, we'll create
Collections for both our itinerary and our budget.
SCHEDULES
T ime is a critical consideration for any project, even (especially!)
travel. So with our list of activities in place, the next step is to
contextualize them in terms of time. For that we will need a
Collection designed for that purpose, like an itinerary. Chances are
you've created an itinerary before. If so, revisit your old friend and
reminisce. Study it and reflect on how both the design and the
experience it stored suited you.
What did you learn? Do you tend to be overoptimistic and
overpack your days? Did that leave you feeling stressed and/or
exhausted? Or did you wing it a little too much, only to discover that
there were museum shows you didn't know about and allow time
for, restaurants where the maitre d' coolly informed you that the
tables book up weeks in advance, and sweet little day trips that
weren't even on your radar? This is not about dwelling on the past;
it's about reapplying what you learned to improve your odds of
having a better experience. What would you do differently this time
around?
Let's start by figuring out when to go. There's rarely a perfect
time for anything, but don't let that be your excuse. Be practical
about it. You'll want to get the most amount of time possible. If
you're a nine-to-five worker, the best way to hack your travel may
be to lump it in with national holidays, thereby extending your time
off without sacrificing too many paid vacation days.
Once we know our travel dates, we can start to design our
schedule template accordingly. This is one of the few instances
where I'll use both a pen and a pencil to design a Collection. There
are a lot of decisions that need to be made here, and chances are
you'll have to keep updating things as you go. Always factor usage
into your design. If you're working on a Collection that is designed
to order sequences such as events or activities, make sure to use
tools that will allow for the necessary flexibility.
1. To set up my template, I considered the relevant variables:
where, when, and what (this page ). The first column addresses the
where. Since we'll be island-hopping, it's rather important to know
where we are on which day. In this example, the first column
denotes location with the airport code and the page number of that
location's Subcollection. I've threaded that destination (this page )
in the Subcollection in case something doesn't work out, so I can
quickly pick an alternative from the list. The text is oriented
vertically to add some visual friction, making it easier to see once
we add the dates. You'll also note that the location column breaks
the barrier between days. This helps underscore transition between
locations so travel days are easily discernible. Additionally, the
location column extends into the following day to different depths.
The depth of the bar roughly indicates what time of day the flight is.
2. The next column lists the ^when" by running the trip dates
down the left margin in chronological order. For added legibility, the
dates and the day of the week are given more space so they're easier
to see at a glance.
HAWAII ITINERARY
9:00 — Check in (à) Reef Hotel
25 Town and beach
HNL / 11
TU 3:00 Kundalini class
o9 7:30 Dinner @ The Rum Barrel
11:30 Check out
/ 4:00 Flight to Mauna Kea
5:30 Capoeira class
8-10 Manta diving
Emerald Beach day!
3:00 Surf class
7:30 Dinner @ The Secret Garden
MUE / 12 9:00 — Yoga class
Lava fields
3:00 Dinner @ Surf House
7:30 Night Market
9:00 = Check out
/ 11:00 — Flight to HNL
7:30 Dinner @ Sushi Kona
9:00 Check out
HNL / 11 11:00 Flight to HO
3:00 Dinner @ Jimmies
" B J
3. With dates and locations all figured out, now all that's left to
do is plug in our activities. Items toward the top of a cell are
scheduled in the morning, with each successive item happening
later in the day. Since some activities required booking ahead of
time, the activities are preceded by a time. It helps us slot in the
remaining activities from our “Destinations” Subcollection
accordingly.
You may think this is all very elaborate. Perhaps your travel
planning is of the “throw a dart at a map” variety. Again, this is only
a fast example to illustrate the considerations that go into crafting
and relating your own Collections, no matter what their application
may be. This is your journey, but sometimes it's helpful to see how
to draw a map before you draft your own.
TRACKERS
You can't manage what you can't measure.
— PETER DRUCKER
Ary common type of Custom Collection in Bullet Journals are
trackers. These can take pretty much any form you can imagine. I’ve
seen illustrated bookcases lined with the books read by the Bullet
Journalist, or pieces of popcorn tracking all the movies someone’s
watched. Though these clever trackers inject Collections with personality
and whimsy, the underlying focus for most successful trackers is to
monitor progress toward an intended goal.
Trackers are a great example of how we can take larger goals and
deconstruct them into smaller actionable steps. They make potentially
intimidating endeavors more manageable, and they keep us honest. Our
memories and realities often are not the best of friends. Having a place
where you log and objectively monitor your progress can go a long way to
keeping you on track.
In our case we'll create a simple budget tracker that will serve two
purposes. First, it will allow us to group our priorities on one page so we
can see how much the trip will cost us. Second, we can visually monitor
our progress toward affording those activities.
I’ve provided a basic example here for our budget tracker. It’s divided
into three main columns. The first lists activities. The second focuses on
cost by providing an activity’s total cost and how much we need to set
aside each month. The third is the actual tracker column. Here the costs
are spread out across the months leading up to the trip. This way I can
quickly see how much I need to save every month, as well as monitor my
progress toward my goals. If I happen to miss a month, I can mark that
amount in the corresponding cell where I fell short. This allows us to
quickly total the balance if necessary.
At the bottom of the tracker you'll note that there is a total. Next to it,
you'll see that I've added the months again. This makes it easier for my eye
ce »
to track the column. Here you will see a “+ " for when I add funds above
the required minimum and a “~” for how much I fell short.
This layout provides a lot of oversight into the trip's financials. It does
so by making room for error. Things come up, and you may not have the
cash one month. That's really important to know. When you keep it all in
your head it's easy to lose an overview of your progress—or your lack
thereof. By keeping a tracker, you'll have a clear picture of where you
actually are in the context of where you want to be.
HAWAII BUDGET
EXPENSE Total / M 4567891011
Tickets to Hawaii 1200/50 XXXxxx 50
Tickets to Mauna Kea 120/15 15xxxxxx
Ticket to Honolulu 140/18 X 18xXXXxxx
Honolulu Hotel 360/45 XXXXXXX
Mauna Kea Hotel 235/30 30XXXXXxx
Surfing Lessons 100/13 XXXXXXX
Lava Fields 25/3 XXXXXXX
Diving With Mantas 100/13 XX45XXXXx
Food Budget 350/44 X44 XXXXX
Gas 100/13 XXXXXXX
Misc 500/65 XXXx65xx
TOTAL 3,230/309 45678910 11
+
249
= 4562455065 50
Using Collections to Form Context
Dedicated trackers can be used in conjunction with your Daily Logs to
surface even more context. One allows you to measure, while the other can
provide some much-needed insight. Did I not go to the gym because I was
lazy, sick, or sad? What were the circumstances that did or did not allow
me to make progress?
Though making progress is clearly desirable, it shouldn’t be your sole
focus. Only focusing on the outcome will often blind you to valuable
information that surfaces during the process itself. I would argue that the
point of tracking is just as much about cultivating self-awareness as it is
about making progress.
In order to make any true progress, you need to understand the effects
of your efforts. You need to understand not only what is or is not working,
but also why . Losing 10 pounds is great, but knowing that it had nothing
to do with the gym and everything to do with your diet is much more
valuable. Now the correlation may not always be that direct, but as long as
we are tracking, we are bound to find patterns. That's what's important:
becoming aware of cause and effect. The more we know, the more effective
we can be, and the more progress we can make.
CUSTOMIZATION
MI Custom Collections serve an important purpose in helping
your Bullet Journal reflect you in all your infinite variety, it's
important to remember we don't always have to reinvent the wheel
for every new venture. Often, core Collections can be customized to
adapt to our current situation.
When you're at home, for example, chances are your Daily Log
will be in work mode, primarily focused on capturing Tasks and
organizing your responsibilities. When you travel, however, you go
into vacation mode and won't be using your Daily Logs in this task-
oriented way—at least you shouldn't be; you're on vacation!
Traveling breaks our routine and exposes us to new things. All sorts
of thoughts can bubble up that are hard to wrap our head or heart
around. One way to take the heat or chill out of a thought is to get it
out of your head by writing about it.
Long-Form Journaling
The benefits of long-form journaling are well documented,
especially when it comes to stress reduction and combating anxiety.
If you’re reading this book, you’ve likely dabbled in some form of
more traditional journaling, be it expressive writing or morning
pages, at some point in your life. Perhaps you’re still actively
engaged in the process. I’m often asked how it fits in with the Bullet
Journal method, so let’s take a look at how we can customize our
Daily Log to both capture thoughts quickly and facilitate long-form
journaling.
When you check in with your Bullet Journal during your Daily
Reflection at your hotel or when lying on the beach, jot down any
big, interesting, or heavy thoughts as you would any other Note. But
it's not just any Note, is it? It's distracting and won't let you go. It
warrants more time and attention and needs to be unpacked and
examined. When this is the case, all you need to do is turn the Note
dash *- " into a plus “+ ". Now you can quickly scan your Notes and
locate the specific thought when you're ready to hunker down to
write about it. When you do, take as much room as you need to
think. That's what your Bullet Journal is there for, after all. There is
no pressure to make this a regular part of your practice. Just know
that this helpful tool can be available to you if and when you need it.
12.20.MO
© Went to the green sand beach
— Fighter jets in the sky
© Yoga class
— Totally out of shape
— Felt really stressed
-+
e Make reservations at the Lazlo
* Buy more suntan lotion
12.21.TU
© Saw dolphins
— Totally sunburnt *
* Find time to talk to Linda
* Call about night market bus
Habit Tracking
Another example of customizing an existing Collection is by
integrating a habit tracker into your Monthly Log. This simple
addition makes it easy to monitor habits you're trying to add or
subtract. Let's say I want to track how many times I cook, read, and
go to the gym in a month. Under the dates, I'll add a small key (this
page ): € = Cook, R = Read, G = Gym (this is so my future self will
know what I was keeping track of when looking back through this
note - book). On the right margin of the page, I'll create three
columns: C, R, G. Keep in mind that these columns align with the
days of the month, so I can piggyback on the existing template.
Then I'll add Task bullets in the cells so I can *X" them off when I
successfully take action. This tracker makes it very easy to see how
diligent I've been. Again, it's a subtle addition, but it adds a lot of
functionality.
Some people add the weather to their Daily Log; other people add
affirmations. Feel free to adjust everything I've shown you. As
always, do what works for you.
To be clear, I'm not saying do whatever you want ! Be sure that
any additions or customizations prove themselves helpful over and
over again. Less, but better.
January
1 M .Dinner with Mark
2 T
3 W Drinks with Sam
4 T Handed in Might Co. presentation
5 F
6 S
7 S Sokura convention
8 M
9 T Lisa's birthday
10 W
11 T Intro to Krav
12
13 Drinks with team
14
15
16 A.I. lecture
17 Spin class
Ramen with Darby @ Ichiran
Movie with Niclas
Tim's birthday
Won Victor account!!
—_
©
-" 4224 Zon a ASA ZOOW T
Cooking
Reading
Gym
Remember to add a key or you might forget what you were tracking later
COMMUNITY
T here is no better way to exemplify the potential applications of
the Bullet Journal methodology than by shining a spotlight on
its community. It spans nearly every race, creed, continent, and
industry. This diversity is reflected in the countless solutions the
community has created to tackle the common and not so common
challenges we face in our limited time here.
You may have noticed that some chapters in Part II contain
#hashtags under the titles. These hashtags will help you search
social networks like Instagram and Pinterest for community
examples, for inspiration, and for support. Here are a few more:
#bulletjournalkey, #bulletjournalgratitudelog,
#bulletjournalfoodlog, #bulletjournalmoodlog,
#bulletjournalgymlog.
If you find that a little overwhelming, start by visiting
bulletjournal.com. There you'll find curated tutorials, examples, and
lists of additional resources, largely contributed by the community.
In the meantime, I’ve included some clever and inventive examples
in the pages that follow.
Before you turn the page, though, please keep in mind that what
you're about to see comes from years of exploration and practice.
Each Bullet Journal is a journey into the self. These Bullet
Journalists have submitted the following examples from their
Journals to share the impact that Bullet Journal has had on their
lives, in hopes of inspiring you to pursue your journey in your own
inimitable way.
Kim Alvarez (@tinyrayofsunshine)
In August 2013, I was looking around online for techniques and
ideas to help me organize my life. I happened upon an article on
Lifehacker about the Bullet Journal, and I was mesmerized as I
watched Ryder's tutorial video. ^What a genius system!" I exclaimed
as I eagerly reached over to grab a half-used notebook to give it a
fresh life.
About 20 minutes later, my boyfriend arrived and I
enthusiastically showed him the video, and we were so blown away
at its simplicity that we both started Bullet Journaling right then
and there.
I've always loved notebooks and spending time journaling,
drawing, planning, and writing down my memories, so the Bullet
Journal is a wonderful solution to encompass my medley of
interests.
One of the ideas I was really excited to incorporate into my Bullet
Journal was the practice of Gratitude Logging. I always loved
thinking about and writing down what I was thankful for ever since
I discovered that it was a practice that could instantly make me feel
better by challenging me to notice the tiny sunny moments in
everyday life. I appreciate that I can capture those meaningful
moments as needed.
The flexibility of the system is incredibly welcoming, refreshing,
and empowering. Each day I can start where I am and create exactly
what I need.
I'm deeply grateful to Ryder for kindly sharing this life-changing
system with the world and creating a movement toward simplicity,
mindfulness, and intentionality with a unique analog method!
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Kara Benz (@boho.berry)
My Bullet Journal journey began in August of 2015.
After 15 years in the restaurant industry, I had just opened a
handmade jewelry shop on Etsy. In an effort to get myself
organized, I’d been hopping around from planner to planner, trying
out all of the preprinted layouts. Nothing seemed to work for me. I
even tried some digital apps, but still, nothing offered the flexibility
that I needed for my busy life and growing business.
The idea struck me that I needed to create my own planner, but I
had no idea where to start. While searching for “DIY Planner” on
Pinterest, I stumbled across the concept of Bullet Journaling.
There was not a lot of BuJo inspiration out there at the time, but
after reading through the Bullet Journal website and adapting other
ideas that I'd seen, I started my very first BuJo.
It's now two and a half years later, and I don't think I ever could
have imagined how much this simple system would change my life.
I'm a part of a community of people who “get” me, and I’ve
discovered a lot about myself in the process. I've gotten my life
organized. I've grown so much. And I've had the opportunity to
inspire others along the way.
Some of my favorite Collections are my weekly/daily hybrid
layouts. On Sundays, I sit down and lay out my week, including
important events and appointments. Throughout the week, I add in
my daily tasks, take notes, and journal in the leftover space. It's a
great way to see my week as a whole on Monday as well as plan the
minute details on a daily basis.
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Dee Martinez (@decadethirty)
It was the end of August 2012, surrounded by a sporadic celestial
formation of neuroanatomy textbooks with their pages marked by
scraps of paper scrawled with reminders (most notably to “get some
sleep”), and clinical notes and lecture slides with their haphazard
array of highlighted prose, that I realized my organization and
planning system needed a change. After almost ten years of “fitting
into” traditional planners, Ryder’s intuitive system came at the right
time, and bolstered how I planned and achieved my tasks.
Since then, the Bullet Journal has seen me through numerous
life milestones—finishing my postgraduate studies, moving
interstate for a new career, my wedding, opening a small sideline
online business, buying and moving into a new house, pregnancy
and baby planning, and my new life as a working parent. You name
it, the Bullet Journal has helped me plan with intention, manage my
time more effectively, accomplish some of my life goals, and tackle
my daily tasks with less anxiety. It has also allowed me to become a
part of and contribute to a burgeoning online community of
planners.
I plan in a minimalist style—no fancy date headers, flourishes,
colors, or stickers—but surprisingly, the Collection that has had the
greatest impact is my hand-lettered memories. The format has
changed over the years, but the purpose has remained the same—a
memory from the day written in creative text. The process allows
me to integrate memory keeping with my lifelong obsession with
hand lettering, and facilitates in helping me take a mindful pause in
my day.
July
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Eddy Hope (@itseddyhope)
Hey, I'm Eddy. A self-employed family man working in the social
media industry. Managing multiple client accounts and strategies
can be tough, so I sought out ways to help me stay organized. There
was much talk about digital tools, but I found that searching for the
perfect digital productivity setup is like trying to swim through coal.
Until I came across the Bullet Journal during 2013. Touting itself as
a rapid logging method for completing and tracking tasks and
projects using nothing more than a notebook and a pen. I began to
rely on it for anything important, plus .. . what's cooler than
carrying around a notebook?
After many months of successful use I developed a need for a
way to schedule future events. I tried finding an existing method or
“hack” that solved this issue. I found nothing of use but noticed I
wasn't the only one feeling the same way. So I decided to create my
own system. "The Calendex" was born. A calendar/index hybrid that
merges the visual representation of a calendar with the function of
an Index. A neat table layout provides a handy bird's-eye view of all
upcoming events, meetings, deadlines, etc., so you can see
immediately if you are free or otherwise engaged.
I'm proud to say that The Calendex (thecalendex.com) is now a
popular, fully fledged, stand-alone analog method for planning or
scheduling future events that boasts a growing community of
passionate fans from around the globe.
- THE CALENBEX
WAV hou PEE | TUN)
THE END
THE CORRECT WAY TO BULLET JOURNAL
O ne of the things I love most about watching the Bullet Journal
method evolve in the world is how diverse and inventive the
interpretations are. I choose to keep my Bullet Journal very
minimal. Others choose to make their journals significantly more
exciting to look at. It may appear as though no two Bullet Journals
are the same. I suppose this is why I'm often asked if there's a
correct way to Bullet Journal. It begs a different, more fundamental
question: Is there a wrong way to Bullet Journal? The short answer
is yes.
I think that part of the Bullet Journal's success stems from its
ability to become different tools to different people. Though I
strongly advise starting out simple, if spending the time to
embellish your Bullet Journal motivates you, makes you more
productive, and brings you joy, then you're doing it right. If you look
forward to coming back to your journal and feel that it's your ally,
then you're doing it right.
It's not about how your journal looks; it's about how
it makes you feel and how effective it is.
Don't be intimidated by what you see out there. Ultimately, the
only standard you should be aspiring to is your own. This is your
journey. I don't use that term lightly. Bullet Journaling is a vehicle
for self-exploration, to help you discover what you care about and
the life you want to live. Focus on evolving your Bullet Journal to fit
your needs. The longer you use it, the more helpful it should
become. If that's not the case, then it's time to ask yourself why . Is
it taking too much time? Are you neglecting your needs by trying to
impress others? Are you not making progress? Define the challenge,
and ask yourself: What could I do to make this more helpful to me?
If you don't know what to do, you'll have one of the most
supportive and creative communities in the world as a resource.
Chances are there are Bullet Journalists out there who have tackled
similar challenges and who are more than happy to share their
insights. Whatever challenges you may be facing, know that you're
not alone.
PARTING WORDS
M y favorite part of The Wizard of Oz is when the fellowship
discovers that the mighty wizard is nothing more than an aging
man, pulling levers behind a curtain. Once he's revealed, Dorothy
exclaims, “Oh, you're a very bad man." To which the wizard replies,
“Oh, no, my dear, I... I’m a very good man—I’m just a very bad
wizard."
The fellowship came asking for things they felt they didn't
possess: courage, a heart, a brain. They assumed that only the magic
of a powerful wizard would be able to grant them things otherwise
entirely out of their reach. Though he was indeed a *very bad
wizard," for he had no supernatural powers, the Man of Oz did
possess a skill. He acted as a mirror to those in need, reflecting an
image unclouded by doubt and pain. Through simple observation,
the Man of Oz helped the fellowship realize that what they desired
was within them all along.
The wizard symbolizes our misguided notion that the “cure” to
whatever ails us, the missing piece, exists outside of us. We live in a
commoditized culture that convinces us that our solutions must be
acquired; that something or someone will finally make us whole.
Our search takes us ever farther away from ourselves. Though we
can greatly benefit by keeping our minds and hearts open,
ultimately we remain our own responsibility.
The Man of Oz could see beyond the surface of things and
connect the dots through careful observation, introspection, and a
healthy dose of empathy. This is what the Bullet Journal method
helps us cultivate within ourselves. It's in no way magical, but it can
be a compelling mirror in which we can begin to see ourselves more
clearly with each passing day. It can grant us the insight to see just
how much power we already possess.
The Bullet Journal method helps facilitate your journey of self-
discovery, to realize the agency you can have over your life. It all
depends on your willingness to look past your limitations so that
you may witness your potential. It's a process of reclaiming
responsibility for your experience by finding the courage to look
within. There, in the chaos of it all, you'll find, among the countless
stars, those that shine forth the brightest. As you chart your course
through the ever-unknown waters of tomorrow, you can take
comfort in the certainty of knowing that, sink or swim, you dared.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Q: Pm not artistic. Can I still Bullet Journal?
A: Yes. The only thing that matters in BuJo is the content, not the
presentation.
Q: When should I start?
A: The best time to begin is always now. That said, an ideal time to
start is on the first of the month when you set up your Monthly Log
(this page ).
Q: How long should I try it for?
A: If you're new to Bullet Journaling, your first Monthly Migration
(this page ) can be a real lightbulb moment. This is where it all
begins to click. That's why I highly encourage new Bullet
Journalists to stick with it for at least two to three months when
testing it out.
Q: What notebook should I use?
A: A high-quality notebook that will last. The two main things to
keep in mind are size and quality. If it's too big, you'll never take it
with you. If it's too small, it will be impractical. Be sure to get
something that's rugged enough to keep up with you, and that can
stand the test of time. If you're so inclined, you can purchase the
custom Bullet Journal notebook I designed on Bulletjournal.com. It
features numbered pages, an Index, a Bullet key, three bookmarks,
and more.
Q: Pen vs. pencil?
A: Use what makes your handwriting most legible and doesn't fade.
One of the great benefits of Bullet Journaling is that, over time, you
assemble a library of notebooks. This library is a wonderful thing to
revisit years later.
Q: What if I lose my notebook?
A: Even though a Bullet Journal can be intensely personal, I highly
recommend adding a very visible note in the front of the book for
people to contact you should you lose it. Leaving your first name
and your phone number only should do the trick. Cash rewards are
a great incentive, but so are personalized messages. My Bullet
Journal fell out of my bag on a train to New York during rush hour,
andit was returned to me.
Q: How do I deal with Recurring Tasks?
A: You can create custom bullets (this page ) and add them to your
Monthly Logs Calendar page (this page ). This allows you to quickly
scan your month and see when that Task or Event is happening.
Q: What do I do about forgetting to check in with my
journal?
A: We created an app for that. It's called The Bullet Journal
Companion. It's not a BuJo app, but it's a companion app for your
notebook. It allows you to store your thoughts while you're away
from your journal, set reminders to check in, take pictures of your
pages, and more. Yes, it's available for iOS and Android.
Q: Is there an app for that?
A: See previous answer and bulletjournal.com/pages/app .
Q: How much space should the Daily Log take up?
A: As much or as little as you need. Life is unpredictable, and that's
why the BuJo is designed to evolve organically. Pick up wherever
you left off, and avoid hoarding pages.
Q: How do I migrate notebooks?
A: Review your notebook for things that helped you make progress.
Only move the things that added value to your life into your next
notebook. You can also thread content that you don't want to
rewrite (this page ).
Q: What is the difference between a scheduled and a
migrated Task?
A: A scheduled Task is a future Task that falls outside the current
month, and has been moved backward into the Future Log. A
Migrated Task is a current Task that has been moved forward into
the Monthly Log (this page ) or a Custom Collection (this page ).
Q: When should I move things from the Future Log?
A: When you're setting up the new Monthly Log (this page ).
Q: How many notebooks should I use a year?
A: As many as you need. I use three to four a year.
Q: How do I use a digital calendar with the Bullet Journal?
A: You can use a digital calendar to replace your Future Log. During
the day, capture any dates in your Daily Log, and then when you get
a moment, like during Daily Reflection, add them to your calendar.
Q: How long should I take for Daily Reflection?
A: As long as you need. The trick is to be consistent. If you find
yourself not doing it, then reduce the amount of time you're
spending.
Q: How do you plan and manage multiple projects?
A: When I have multiple projects, I separate them into different
Collections, and then I use my Index to quickly access projects later.
You can also create a “Dedicated Index” for each project; this is
especially useful if the project is big and involved. If you're in
school, for example, you can use one Index page per class (this page
).
Q: What do I do with a Task that needs to be completed on a
certain day and that day hasn't arrived yet?
A: If it’s within the current month, your Daily Reflection will keep
you aware of the task. If it's not, you can add it to your Future Log
(this page ).
Q: Why do you keep only one item for each day in your
Monthly Log? Is this intentional?
A: When I make Bullet Journal tutorials, I only show one item
under each day so that it's more legible to my viewers. In my
personal Bullet Journal, I Rapid Log two or three items each day.
For me, the Monthly Log is about having a bird's-eye view about
what I've already done, so I often end up writing down items after
they've already happened.
Q: What is the difference between the Task page on the
Monthly Log and the Daily Log in general?
A: The purpose of the Daily Log (this page ) is to declutter your
mind—you're not really thinking so much about what you're writing
down. You just want to get it down on paper. The Tasks that go into
the Monthly Log are the ones that you've taken time to consider;
you know that they're important and that they're a priority.
Q: How do I reference material from within my Bullet
Journal?
A: For that you set up an Index (this page ) and pair it with a
technique called Threading (this page ).
Q: How do I reference material from a previous notebook,
Bullet Journal or otherwise?
A: By notebook Threading (this page ) or by using the Bullet Journal
Companion app. It was designed to extend the functionality of your
notebook. You can add your previous notebooks to the app using the
"Library" function by uploading pictures of the Index pages and
tagging previous notebooks.
I WOULD LIKE TO THANK:
John Mass and Celeste Fine, my agents with Sterling Lord Literistic,
for their unwavering guidance, support, and patience.
Leah Trouwborst and Toni Sciarra Pointer, my editors, for their
herculean efforts, wisdom, and ability to help me get through to the
other side.
The Portfolio team at Penguin Random House for believing in
this project and helping bring it together, and to Helen Healey for
keeping the Christmas lights untangled.
My readers: Keith Gould, Linda Hoecker, Kim Alvarez, Niclas
Bahn, Lisse Grullesman, Rachel Beider, Leigh Ollman, and my folks
for their insights that helped me see the forest through the trees.
All the Bullet Journalists who contributed their art, stories, and
ideas throughout this book: Dee Martinez, Eddie Hope, Kim
Alvarez, Kara Benz, Heather Caliri, Amy Haines, Anthony Gorrity,
Rachael M., Timothy Collinson, Cheryl Bridges, Hubert Webb,
Bridget Bradley, Olov Wimark, Sandra-Olivia Mendel, Carey
Barnett, and Michael S.
The BuJo community for helping spread Bullet Journal around
the world. I would not be here without you.
NOTES
1 Neil Irwin, “Why Is Productivity So Weak? Three Theories," New York Times , April 28,
2016, https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/29/upshot/why-is-productivity-so-weak-
three-theories.html .
2 Bureau of Labor Statistics, https: //www.bls.gov/opub/btn/volume-6/below-trend-the-us-
productivity-slowdown-since-the-great-recession.htm .
3 Daniel J. Levitin, “Why the Modern World Is Bad for Your Brain," The Guardian ,
January 15, 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jan/18/modern-world-
bad-for-brain-daniel-j-levitin-organized-mind-information-overload .
4 Maria Konnikova, "What's Lost as Handwriting Fades," New York Times , June 2, 2014,
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/03/science/whats-lost-as-handwriting-fades.html .
5 Joan Didion, “On Keeping a Notebook,” in Slouching Towards Bethlehem (New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1968), 139-40.
6 Susie Steiner, "Top Five Regrets of the Dying," The Guardian , February 1, 2012,
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2012/feb/01/top-five-regrets-of-the-dying .
7 David Bentley Hart, The Experience of God: Being, Consciousness, Bliss (New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press, 2013), 191—92.
8 Cyndi Dale, Energetic Boundaries: How to Stay Protected and Connected in Work,
Love, and Life (Boulder, CO: Sounds True, Inc., 2011).
9 Jory MacKay, "This Brilliant Strategy Used by Warren Buffett Will Help You Prioritize
Your Time,” Inc ., November 15, 2017, https://www.inc.com/jory-mackay/warren-
10 Michael Lewis, “Obama’s Way,” Vanity Fair , October 2012,
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2012/10/michael-lewis-profile-barack-obama .
11 Roy F. Baumeister and John Tierney, Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human
Strength (New York: Penguin, 2011).
12 "Americans check their phones 80 times a day: study," New York Post , November 8,
2017, https://nypost.com/2017/11/08/americans-check-their-phones-80-times-a-day-
study .
13 Thuy Ong, *UK Government Will Use Church Spires to Improve Internet Connectivity in
Rural Areas," The Verge , February 19, 2018,
https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/19/17027446/uk-government-churches-wifi-
internet-connectivity-rural .
14 Adrian F. Ward, Kristen Duke, Ayelet Gneezy, and Maarten W. Bos, *Brain Drain: The
Mere Presence of One's Own Smartphone Reduces Available Cognitive Capacity,"
Journal of the Association for Consumer Research 2, no. 2 (April 2017): 140—54,
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/691462 .
15 "The Total Audience Report: Q1 2016," Nielsen, June 27, 2016,
http://www.nielsen.com/us/en/insights/reports/2016/the-total-audience-report-q1-
2016.html .
16 Olga Khazan, “How Smartphones Hurt Sleep,” The Atlantic , February 24, 2015,
https: //www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/02/how-smartphones-are-ruining-
our-sleep/385792 .
17 Perri Klass, “Why Handwriting Is Still Essential in the Keyboard Age,” June 20, 2016,
New York Times , https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2016/06/20/why-handwriting-is-still-
essential-in-the-keyboard-age .
18 Pam A. Mueller and Daniel M. Oppenheimer, “The Pen Is Mightier Than the Keyboard,”
Psychological Science 25, no. 6 (April 2014): 1159-68,
http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0956797614524581 .
19 Robinson Meyer, "To Remember a Lecture Better, Take Notes by Hand," The Atlantic ,
May 1, 2014, https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/05/to-remember-a-
lecture-better-take-notes-by-hand/361478 .
20 Daniel Gilbert, Stumbling on Happiness (New York: Vintage, 2007).
21 Robert Bresson, Notes on the Cinematographer , translated by Jonathan Griffin
(Kobenhavn: Green Integer Books, 1997).
22 David Foster Wallace, This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant
Occasion, About Living a Compassionate Life (New York: Little, Brown, and Company,
2009).
23 Ibid.
24 Leo Babauta, “How I'm Overcoming My Obsession with Constant Self-Improvement,”
Fast Company , March 19, 2015, https://www.fastcompany.com/3043543/how-im-
overcoming -my-obsession-with-constant-self-improvement .
25 Caroline Beaton, "Never Good Enough: Why Millennials Are Obsessed with Self-
Improvement," Forbes , February 25, 2016,
https://www.forbes.com/sites/carolinebeaton/2016/02/25/never-good-enough-why-
millennials-are-obsessed-with-self-improvement/ £cfood917efa9 .
26 Theresa Nguyen et al., "The State of Mental Health in America 2018," Mental Health
America , 2017, http://www.mentalhealthamerica.net/issues/state-mental-health-
america .
27 “Facts & Statistics," Anxiety and Depression Association of America , 2016,
https://adaa.org/about-adaa/press-room/facts-statistics£ .
28 "Impact bias," Wikipedia , May 2016, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact bias.
29 Tim Minchin, *Occasional Address," commencement address at University of Western
Australia, TimMinchin.com, September 25, 2013,
http://www.timminchin.com/2013/09/25/occasional-address .
30 Olivia Solon, “Ex-Facebook President Sean Parker: Site Made to Exploit Human
"Vulnerability," The Guardian , November 9, 2017,
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/nov/09/facebook-sean-parker-
vulnerability-brain-psychology .
31 “Eudaimonism,” Philosophy Basics, accessed April 6, 2018,
https://www.philosophybasics.com/branch eudaimonism.html .
32 "Okinawa's Centenarians," Okinawa Centenarian Study, accessed April 6, 2018,
http://okicent.org/cent.html .
33 Héctor García and Francesc Miralles, Ikigai: The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy
Life (New York: Penguin, 2017).
34 Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning: An Introduction to Logotherapy (New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1984).
35.Jordan B. Peterson, “2017 Personality 12: Phenomenology: Heidegger, Binswanger,
Boss,” February 20, 2017, video, 46:32, https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v-110BFCNeTAs.
36 Angela Lee Duckworth, “Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance,” TED Talks
Education , April 2013,
https://www.ted.com/talks/angela lee duckworth grit the power of passion and
perseverance£t-184861 .
37 Maria Konnikova, “Multitask Masters," New Yorker , May 7, 2014,
https://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/multitask-masters .
38 Tanya Basu, "Something Called 'Attention Residue' Is Ruining Your Concentration," The
Cut , January 21, 2016, https://www.thecut.com/2016/01/attention-residue-is-ruining-
your-concentration.html .
39 Kent Beck et al., “Manifesto for Agile Software Development,” Agile Alliance,
http://agilemanifesto.org , accessed July 2, 2018.
40 Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark (New York:
Ballantine Books, 1996).
41 Madison Malone-Kircher, “James Dyson on 5,126 Vacuums That Didn't Work—and the
One That Finally Did," New York , November 22, 2016,
http:///nymag.com/vindicated/2016/11/james-dyson-on-5-126-vacuums-that-didnt-
work-and-1-that-did.html .
42 W. Edwards Deming, The New Economics for Industry, Government, and Education
(Boston, MA: MIT Press, 1993).
43 “Albert Einstein,” Wikiquote , accessed April 6, 2018,
https: //en.wikiquote.org /wiki/Albert_Einstein# Disputed .
44 Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, “Flow, the Secret to Happiness,” TED , February 2004,
https://www.ted.com/talks/mihaly csikszentmihalyi on flow.
45. Marcus Aurelius, Meditations , trans. Martin Hammond (New York: Penguin, 2006).
46 Jack Zenger and Joseph Folkman, "The Ideal Praise-to-Criticism Ratio," Harvard
Business Review , March 15, 2013, https://hbr.org/2013/03/the-ideal-praise-to-criticism
47 Amy Morin, *7 Scientifically Proven Benefits of Gratitude That Will Motivate You to Give
Thanks Year-Round," Forbes , November 23, 2014,
https://www.forbes.com/sites/amymorin/2014/11/23/7-scientifically-proven-benefits-of-
gratitude-that-will-motivate-you-to-give-thanks-year-round/ 136740518 3co0 .
48 David Steindl-Rast, "^Want To Be Happy? Be Grateful," TED, June 2013,
https://www.ted.com/talks/david steindl rast want to be happy be grateful.
49 Commonly attributed to Mark Twain.
50 Heinrich Harrer, Seven Years in Tibet (New York: TarcherPerigee, 2009).
51 Winnie Yu, "Workplace Rudeness Has a Ripple Effect," Scientific American , January 1,
2012, https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ripples-of-rudeness .
52 Seth Godin, “The First Law of Organizational Thermodynamics,” Seth's Blog , February
12, 2018, http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths blog/2018/02/the-first-law-of-
organization-thermodynamics.html .
53 Joshua Fields Millburn, “Goodbye Fake Friends," The Minimalists ,
https://www.theminimalists.com/fake .
54. Sam Cawthorn (@samcawthorn), “The happiest people dont necessarily have the best of
everything but they make the most of everything!!!" June 24, 2011, 4:39 PM, tweet.
55 Drake Baer, “Malcolm Gladwell Explains What Everyone Gets Wrong About His Famous
‘10,000 Hour Rule," Business Insider , June 2, 2014,
http://www.businessinsider.com/malcolm-gladwell-explains-the-10000-hour-rule-2014-
6.
56 “14 Ways to Be a Happier Person," Time , September 18, 2014,
http://time.com/collection/guide-to-happiness/4856925/be-happy-more-joy .
57 Jonathan G. Koomey, Turning Numbers into Knowledge: Mastering the Art of Problem
Solving (Oakland, CA: Analytics Press, 2008).
CONTENT
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided
will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that
location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.
achievement, 184 —85
adaptation, 143 —44
analysis paralysis, 253
anxiety disorders, 142
Apple, 36
apps, 42 —46, 47 —48, 164
Bullet Journal Companion, 293 , 296
art, 229 -83
artistic talent and, 291
overview of, 231 —36
see also specific subjects
attention, 176
attention deficit disorder (ADD), 4, 7 , 11
attention residue, 156
attention span, 180
autopilot, operating on, 30 , 108 , 139 , 205
awareness, 139 —40
Babauta, Leo, 142
Baldwin, Christina, 42
Barnett, Carey, 104
Baumeister, Roy F., 36
beginning, 127 —30, 243
in practice, 129 —30
Benz, Kara, 278 —79
better days practice, 173 —74
biorhythms, 180
Bradley, Bridget, 49
brainstorming, 160 —63
Custom Collection and, 240
break-sprints, 219 —21
Bresson, Robert, 129
Bridges, Cheryl S., 99
Buddhism, 225
budget tracker, 265 —67
Buffett, Warren, 35
Bullet Journal (BuJo), 6 —13, 23 —25
art of, 229 -83
artistic talent and, 291
overview of, 231 —36
see also specific subjects
author's development of, 3 —6, 169 —70
community, 236 , 274 —83
Benz, Kara, 278 —79
Hope, Eddy, 282 -83
Martinez, Dee, 280 -81
flexibility of, 44 , 53., 84 —85, 233
frequently asked questions about, 291 —96
modular structure of, 53., 84
practice in, 12 —13, 24 , 121 —228, 232
overview of, 123 —26
see also specific subjects
preparation in, 1 -50
decluttering your mind, 34 —41
handwriting and, 47 —50
promise in, 15 -22
reasons for using notebooks, 42 —46
right and wrong ways to do, 287 -88
system in, 12 —13, 24 , 25 , 51 —119, 232
Collections in, see Collections
letter about impact of, 114 —17
Migration in, see Migration
overview of, 53 —57
Rapid Logging in, see Rapid Logging
set up in, 118 —19
“why” in, 26 —33, 114 , 132 —33, 139
bulletjournal.com, 6 , 159 , 274 , 292
Bullet Journal Companion, 293 , 296
Bullets, 65. —66
Custom, 80 -83
busy, being, 34 , 123_—24, 156
calendar, digital, 294
Calendar page, 91 —94, 292
Caliri, Heather, 127 —28
capoeira, 231 —32, 254
cause and effect, 268
Cawthorn, Sam, 205 -6
celebration, 185 —86
challenges, 4 —5, 7 , 12 , 49, 151, 169 —70, 221, 288
Collections and, 239 , 248
deconstructing, see deconstruction
of Tasks, 179 , 180
challenging people and situations, writing letter about, 192 —93
change, 167 , 189
good, 227 —28
chaos, 224
Cheshire, Ray, 59
Chinese proverb, 47
choices, see decisions and choices
clarity log, 205 -8
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), 49
Cohen, Leonard, 222
Collections, 22 , 24 , 25, 57 , 84 -85, 237 , 294
challenges and, 239 , 248
customization of, 269 —73
habit tracker in Monthly Log, 272
long-form journaling, 269 —71
see also Custom Collections
long-form journaling and, 270
setting up, 118
space required for, 88 —89, 293
function vs. form in, 245
Future Log, 56 , 85, 95 —98, 118 , 294 , 295
setting up, 118
Dedicated Index, 102 —3, 294
setting up, 118
Subcollections in, 102 , 254
threading and, 104 —5, 296
ingredients of, 250 —51
junk drawer, 238
Calendar, 90 —93, 292
habit tracker in, 272
setting up, 118
Tasks Page (or Mental Inventory), 92 , 93 —94
priorities and, 246
Stack of, 84
studying, 235
Subcollections, 102 , 254
sustainability of, 248 —49
updating, 249
Collinson, Timothy, 244
community, 236 , 274 —83
Benz, Kara, 278 —79
Hope, Eddy, 282 -83
Martinez, Dee, 280 -81
compassion, 197 —98
self-compassion, 197 —99
consistency, 139
content and design, function and form, 236 , 237 , 244 , 245 —47, 291
context, 93 , 205 , 232 , 254
Daily Log and, 86
5,4,3,2,1exercise and, 153
Index and, 105
information processing and, 78
lists and, 66 , 257 —60
Signifiers and, 80 -82
trackers and, 266 —68
continual improvement, 167 —68, 225 , 227 , 249
control, 189 —94, 196
in practice, 191 —94
process vs. outcome, 193 —94
responding vs. reacting, 191 —93
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly, 176 —77
curiosity, 78 , 125_, 147 , 249
Task creation and, 168
Custom Bullets, 80 -83
Custom Collections, 232 —34, 235., 237 —43, 269
caveat for, 233 —34
purpose in, 235
setting up, 118
sources for, 238 —40
challenges, 239 , 248
goals, 238 —39
Tasks, 239 —40
steps in creating, 240 —43
brainstorming, 240
examining motivations, 240 —43
trackers, 245 —46, 265 —68
context and, 266 —68
habit, 245 —46, 272 —73
long-form journaling and, 270
setting up, 118
space required for, 88 —89, 293
Dalai Lama, 194
death, 181 -82
Debussy, Claude, 248
decisions and choices, 29 , 35—37, 46, 133 , 173
decision avoidance, 36
decision fatigue, 36 , 37
memory and, 74
poor, 132
self-awareness and, 132
test for, 40 —41
decluttering your mind, 34 —41, 295
deconstruction, 209 -16
in practice, 212 —16
“five whys” technique, 213 —14
plan of attack, 214 —16
Deming, W. Edwards, 171
Deming Cycle, 171
depression, 142 , 164
design, 244 —49
content and (form vs. function), 236 , 237 , 244., 245. —47, 291
decoration, 248 —49
legibility and, 247 —48, 292
sustainability in, 248 —49
white space in, 248
Didion, Joan, 20
digital tools, 42 —46, 47 —48
Drucker, Peter, 107 , 265
Duckworth, Angela Lee, 151 —52
Dyson, James, 171
ecstasy, 177
Edison, Thomas, 170 , 171
Einstein, Albert, 175
emotions, 144 , 190
endurance, 203 —8
in practice, 205 -8
clarity log, 205 -8
energy, 196
En(üma Eli&, 209 , 216
eudaimonism, 145
Events, 66 , 71—75, 82
tips for, 74 —75
Facebook, 36 , 144
planning and, : 250 I
fear, 127 , 167
Flint, Mike, 35
flow, 176 —77, 179
On priorities, 155 —57
form and function, design and content, 236 , 237 , 244 , 245 —47, 291
Frankl, Viktor, 146
Franklin, Benjamin, 250
frequently asked questions, 291 —96
Frost, Robert, 148
function and form, content and design, 236 , 237 , 244 , 245 —47, 291
future, 133
Future Log, 56 , 85, 95 —98, 118 , 294 , 295
setting up, 118
future-proof design, 236 , 246
Gandhi, Mahatma, 195
Garcia, Héctor, 145. —46
Gilbert, Dan, 74
Gladwell, Malcolm, 227
goals, 35_, 41 , 125 , 129 , 142 —43, 147 , 150 —65
big, 151
Custom Collections and, 238 —40
dividing into phases, 158 , 161
long-term, perseverance and passion for, 161 —62
meaningful, 151
of other people, appropriating, 151
in practice, 152 —65
brainstorming, 160 —63
breaking down goals into Sprints, 157 —65, 217
5,4, 3, 2, L exercise, 153 —54, 155
focus on your priorities, 155 —57
Goals Collection, 152 —53, 219
prioritize your goals, 155
process in, 156 —57, 268
reactionary, 150 —51
trackers and, 265
Godin, Seth, 196
Gorrity, Anthony, 11 —12
Goruck Challenge, 142
gratitude, 183 —88
in practice, 185 —88
celebration, 185 —86
incorporating gratitude practice in Bullet Journal, 186 —87, 199
Greeks, ancient, 145 , 146 , 177
Grit (Duckworth), 151 —52
habit tracking, 245 —46, 272 —73
Haines, Amy, 15 , 22
handwriting, 20 , 47 —50
legibility and, 247 —48, 292
Hannibal Barca, 217
happiness, 125 , 142 —46, 177 , 205 -6
Harryhausen, Ray, 157
Hart, David Bentley, 29
hedonic adaptation, 144
Hope, Eddy, 282 -83
"How I'm Overcoming My Obsession with Constant Self-Improvement" (Babauta), 142
Hunt, Andrew, 218
ikigai, 145
impact bias, 143
imperfection, 222 —28
in practice, 225 —28
good change, 227 -28
practicing imperfection, 225 —26
improvement
continual, 167 —68, 225 , 227 , 249
mutual, 199 —201
self-, 141 —42, 227
Dedicated Index, 102 —3, 294
setting up, 118
Subcollections in, 102 , 254
threading and, 104 —5, 296
inertia, 217 —21
in practice, 217 —21
break-sprints, 219 —21
rubber ducking, 217 —19
influence, 196
information, 76 , 78
overload, 17
and writing by hand, 48
insight, 72
inspiration bullets, 82
Instagram, 274
goals and, 155. —56
International Prototype of the Kilogram, 223
iteration, 170 —73
Japan, 145 , 167 —68, 213 , 224 , 227
Jobs, Steve, 36
journaling, 49 , 58
long-form, 269 -71
kaizen, 167 —68, 171
Kauffman, Trey, 191
kilogram, 223
learning, 201 -2
Lee, Bruce, 138
legibility, 247 —48, 292
Le Grand K, 223
Leroy, Sophie, 156
"less, but better" principle, 245., 246
letter writing, in dealing with challenging situation, 192 —93
Levitin, Daniel, 17 , 227
Lincoln, Abraham, 175
lists, 255 —60
context in, 66 , 257 —60
prioritizing in, 66 , 257
Lynch, David, 183
Marcus Aurelius, 182 , 209
Marduk, 209
Martinez, Dee, 280 -81
mastery, 227
meaning, 15., 28 —30, 45., 124 , 125, 128 —29, 132 —34, 141 —49, 150 , 205
feeling and, 146
happiness and, 125 , 142 —46
of obligations and responsibilities, 206 —8
shining forth and, 146 —47
“tale of two lives" thought experiment, 148 —49
meditation, 184
memento mori, 180 —82
memories, 49
decision making and, 74
unreliability of, 74
mental illness, 49 , 144
Mental Inventory, 37 —39, 53., 120
migrating, 112 —13, 119
reviewing, 119
Tasks Page, 92 , 93 —94
test of items in, 40 —41
evaluating Collections during, 249
Mental Inventory and, 107 —113, 119
Monthly, 108 —10, 194 , 208 , 249
reflection through, 137 —38
scheduled vs. migrated tasks, 293
Yearly/Notebook, 111 —12, 249
reflection through, 137 —38
Millburn, Joshua Fields, 200
Minchin, Tim, 143
mind, see thoughts
mindfulness, 15. —16, 19 —21, 25 , 132 , 184 , 187
Minimalists, 200
mise en place, 250
mission statement, 241 —43, 252
Monthly Log, 56 , 85., 90 —94, 96 , 118 , 248 , 291, 295
Calendar, 90 —93, 292
habit tracker in, 272
setting up, 118
Tasks Page (or Mental Inventory), 92 , 93.-94
Moral Letters to Lucilius (Seneca), ix
Morris, William, 34
Mother Teresa, 150
motivation, 28 , 142 , 180 , 217 , 235
examining, in creating Custom Collection, 240 —43
multitasking, 156
mutual improvement, 199 —201
negativity bias, 72 , 186
Niebuhr, Reinhold, 189
Nietzsche, Friedrich, 203
Norton, Richie, 26
notebooks, 3 —6, 20 , 41, 42 —46
choosing, 291 —92
how many to use, 294
losing, 292
perfection in, 226
Yearly Migration of, 111 —12, 249
Notes, 66 , 76 —79
personalizing information, 78 —79
processing information, 78
Obama, Barack, 36
obligations and responsibilities, 41 , 178
focusing on meaning and purpose of, 206 -8
occupation, 157
Okinawa, Japan, 145
Organized Mind, The (Levitin), 17
outcome vs. process, 193 —94, 268
overwhelm, 11 , 16 , 34 , 36 , 71, 107 , 158 , 168 , 179 , 239 , 246 , 253
pagination, 62 —64
Paintapic, 26 —27, 123
Parker, Sean, 144
passion, 151 —52
patience, 152
pen and ink, 247 —48, 292
pencil, 292
perfection, 223 —25
mastery vs., 227
in notebook, 226
see also imperfection
perseverance, 151 —52
personal development, self-improvement, 141 —42, 227
perspective, 72 , 219
phainesthai, 146
philosophy, 124 , 145
Stoicism, 182 , 189
phones, 42 —43
Pinterest, 274
planning, 250 —54
failure and, 250
research in, 251 —54
pleasure, 143 —44
practice, 12 —13, 24 , 121 —228
overview of, 123 —26
see also specific subjects
Pragmatic Programmer, The (Hunt and Thomas), 218
preparation, 1 —50
decluttering your mind in, 34 —41
handwriting and, 47 —50
reasons for using notebooks, 42 —46
and the “why” of the Bullet Journal, 26 —33
priorities, prioritizing, 18
focusing on, 155 —57
in Collections, 246
of goals, 155
in lists, 66 , 257
priority bullets, 82
process, 156 —57, 268
outcome vs., 193 —94, 268
procrastination, 180
productivity, 15. —19, 25 , 34 , 44.—45, 107 , 123 —24, 125 , 180
achievement and, 184
apps for, 42 —46, 164
consistency in, 173
progress, 164 , 268
questions, 170
about Bullet Journal, frequently asked, 291 —96
small, 168 —70, 227
why, 26 —33, 115, 132 —33, 130. 142
“five whys” technique, 213 —14
radiance, 195 —202
in practice, 197 —202
learning, 201 -2
mutual improvement, 199 —201
self-compassion, 197 —99
self-awareness and, 196
Rams, Dieter, 245 , 246
Rapid Logging, 57 , 58 —61
Bullets, 65. —66
Custom, 80 -83
Events, 66 , 71—75, 82
tips for, 74 —75
Notes, 66 , 76 —79
personalizing information, 78 —79
processing information, 78
Signifiers, 80 —83, 292
summary of, 83
Tasks, 66 , 67 —70, 82 , 295
accomplishing, 184 , 185
breaking Sprints down into, 168 —70
Custom Collections and, 239 —40
dual purpose of writing down, 70
focusing on the experiences they enable, 206 —7
on future date, 295
recurring, 82 , 292
reverse hierarchy of, 180
scheduled vs. migrated, 293
skills for, 179
Subtasks and Master Tasks, 68 —69
Tasks Page, 92 , 93 —94
Topics and pagination, 62 —64
reactivity, 124 , 135
reacting vs. responding, 191 —93
reactionary goals, 150 —51
Reflection, 70 , 86 , 95 —96, 125 , 131 40, 199 , 201
consistency in, 139
in morning, 136
at night, 136 —37
monthly and yearly, through Migration, 137 —38
in practice, 134 —40
awareness, 139 —40
Sprints and, 164 —65
regrets, 29 , 181
relativity, 175
research, 251 —54
responding vs. reacting, 191 —93
responsibilities, see obligations and responsibilities
risk, 129 , 150
"Road Not Taken, The" (Frost), 148
Rodin, Auguste, 131 —32
Romans, 181 , 182
Rose, Kevin, 159
rubber ducking, 217 —19
Sagan, Carl, 170
Saint- Exupéry, Antoine de, 244
Sandy, 7—9, 12
Saunders, Allen, 123
scheduling, 180
vacation, 261 —64
self-awareness, 30 , 268
decision making and, 132
radiance and, 196
self-compassion, 197 —99
self-discovery and self-learning, 58 , 289 —90
self-improvement, 141 —42, 227
Signifiers, 80 —83, 292
Seneca, ix
Sheldon, W. L., 227
skill level, tasks and, 179
small steps, 166 —74, 228
in practice, 168 —74
better days, 173 —74
iteration, 170 —73
small questions, 168 —70, 227
social networks, 274
Socrates, 131
Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr, 170
Speakers Tribe, 205
Sprints
breaking down goals into, 157 —65, 217
breaking down into Tasks, 168 —70
break-sprints, 219 —21
Stack, 84
Steindl- Rast, David, 141 , 187
Stoics, 182 , 189
success, 141 —42
sustainability, 248 —49
system, 12 —13, 24 , 25 , 51—119, 232
Collections in, see Collections
letter about impact of, 114 —17
Migration in, see Migration
overview of, 53 —57
Rapid Logging in, see Rapid Logging
set up in, 118 —19
Tasks, 66 , 67 —70, 82 , 295
accomplishing, 184 , 185
breaking Sprints down into, 168 —70
Custom Collections and, 239 —40
dual purpose of writing down, 70
focusing on the experiences they enable, 206 —7
on future date, 295
recurring, 82 , 292
reverse hierarchy of, 180
scheduled vs. migrated, 293
skills for, 179
Subtasks and Master Tasks, 68 —69
Tasks Page, 92 , 93 —94
technology, 42 —43, 137
digital tools, 42 —46, 47 —48
10,000-hour rule, 227
tests, 224
Thinker, The (Rodin), 131-32
"This Is Water" (Wallace), 139
Thomas, David, 218
thoughts, 34 , 225 —26
decluttering your mind, 34 —41, 295
externalizing, 37
meditation and, 184
see also Mental Inventory
threading, 105. —6, 296
Tiamat, 209 , 216
time, 175 —82
perception of, 175
in practice, 178 —82
memento mori, 180 —82
scheduling, 180
time boxing, 178 —79, 253
quality of, 176
scheduling, 180
vacation, 261 —64
Tim Ferriss Show, The, 159
Topics and pagination, 62 —64
Toyoda, Sakichi, 213
Toyota, 213
trackers, 245. —46, 265 —68
context and, 266 —68
habit, 245 —46, 272 —73
trauma, 49
Twain, Mark, 193
Twilight Zone, The, 141 , 144
Twin Peaks, 183
University of Washington, 47
vacation, 269 , 270
planning, 239 , 240 —42
budget tracker in, 265 —67
lists in, 255 —60
research in, 251 —54
scheduling itinerary, 261 —64
Valentine, Mr., in Twilight Zone episode, 141 , 144
Van Gogh, Vincent, 127
Vanity Fair, 36
wabi-sabi, 224 —25, 227
waking the page, 243
Wallace, David Foster, 139
Ware, Bronnie, 28 —29
Webb, Bert, 45
Weekly Logs, 112
white space, 248
why, asking, 26 —33, 114 , 132 —33, 139 , 142
“five whys” technique, 213 —14
Wiest, Brianna, 183
Willpower (Baumeister), 36
Wimark, Olov, 163 —64
Wizard of Oz, The, 289 —90
word choices, 76
worry, 193 —94
writing by hand, 20 , 47 —50
legibility and, 247 —48, 292
Zeigarnik, Bluma, 70
Zeigarnik effect, 70
Zen Habits, 142
Zuckerberg, Mark, 36
VWXYZ
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ryder Carroll is a digital product designer and inventor of the Bullet
Journal. He's had the privilege of working with companies like
Adidas, American Express, Cisco, IBM, Macy's, and HP. He's been
featured by the New York Times, LA Times, Fast Company,
Bloomberg, Lifehacker and Mashable . He recently gave a TEDx talk
on intentionality.
* Included in the official Bullet Journal notebook
* Included in the official Bullet Journal notebook
* Does not need to be consecutive.
* Feel free to create a task based on your long-form entry
About the Publisher
Australia
HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty. Ltd.
Level 13, 201 Elizabeth Street
Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia
http://www.harpercollins.com.au
Canada
HarperCollins Canada
Bay Adelaide Centre, East Tower
22 Adelaide Street West, 41st Floor
Toronto, ON, M5H 4E3, Canada
http://www.harpercollins.ca
India
HarperCollins India
A 75, Sector 57
Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201 301, India
http://www.harpercollins.co.in
New Zealand
HarperCollins Publishers (New Zealand) Limited
P.O. Box 1
Auckland, New Zealand
http://www.harpercollins.co.nz
United Kingdom
HarperCollins Publishers Ltd.
] London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
http://www.harpercollins.co.uk
United States
HarperCollins Publishers Inc.
195 Broadway
New York, NY 10007
http://www.harpercollins.com