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My Short Notes: The Bullet Journal Method By Ryder Carroll

Writer's picture: Siddhartha DebSiddhartha Deb


Abstract: What’s in it for me? Plan to perfection!


When is a planner more than a planner? When it’s a to-do list, calendar, journal, and mindfulness meditation tool all in one. In short, when it’s a bullet journal. The bullet journal offers a surprisingly simple method for tracking experiences, collating tasks, and organizing information.

Best of all? Bullet journaling isn’t just about optimizing productivity. Use your bullet journal to track goals and reflect on experiences. Learn to interrogate how you spend your time. You won’t just keep track of what you do; you’ll habitually reflect on why you’re doing it.


In this review, you’ll learn

  • how to decipher the code of “rapid logging;”

  • what time-management strategies will set you up for success; and

  • how you can turn your daydreams into tangible goals.

*self-referencing Post


Takeaways:


1. Edit your tasks before you commit them to the page.

- Take a loose sheet of paper and divide it into three columns. In the first column, list all the things you’re currently doing, both at work and in your personal life. In the second column, list all the things you should be doing. In the third, list all the things you want to be doing.

- Look at each task and ask yourself, is this task important to me? Is it necessary? If the answer is “no,” cross it off your inventory. It’s not going in your bujo.

Before you’ve even cracked your notebook open, you’ve learned one of bujo’s key lessons: what you leave out of your bullet journal is just as important as what you put in.

2. You can do a lot with simple tools and the bullet journal method.

- Now that you’ve got a handle on your tools, what can you do with them? Let’s take a quick look at the components of bullet journaling. Bullet journals aren’t ordered into rigid sections, but instead, use adaptable modules known as collections. Everything inside your bullet journal is a type of collection. The core collections include the index, daily log, monthly log, and future log.

- The index lives at the beginning of your notebook, and it will save you from ever losing that winning idea or forgetting that crucial appointment. It’s an at-a-glance table of everything your bullet journal contains.

- Your logs are where you record key events and information. Your daily log is the repository for all those notes, reminders, and stray bits of information that you collect over the course of a day. Your monthly log is an up-to-date overview of your month, showing what’s been done and what still needs to happen. Your future log is the place where you park all the tasks and ideas you won’t get around to this month, but you don’t want to forget.

- While the index and these three logs are the core collections of your bujo, you can add different, personalized collections wherever you like. Collections can help you organize information around a specific theme or track your progress on a particular goal. The group of collections that you’re actively working on is known as your stack.

- So, how do you actually record things in your journal? Using rapid logging, a system of notes and symbols that lets you capture your thoughts at a pace much faster than typical longhand writing. Let’s dig into that next.

3. Rapid logging lets you log tasks and events quickly.

- Whether it’s in your monthly log, daily log, future log, or a special collection, the content you log will fall into three categories. Tasks or things you need to do. Events or what’s happened. And Notes or important information. Your job interview log might include events like “met with HR representative,” tasks like “send HR rep thank-you email,” and notes like, “job requires travel.”

- To log these, use the distinctive bullets bujo is so well known for, called signifiers. Each category has its own signifier. A task is denoted with a solid bullet. Completed a task? Cross over the bullet with an “x.” To reschedule tasks inside the month, use the bullet as a base for a right-facing arrow. To move a task to your future log, convert your bullet into a left-facing arrow. Use an asterisk to denote urgency.

- Events are marked by an empty bullet: a small unfilled circle. Record events as neutrally as possible, whether they’re good, like a promotion, or bad, like car trouble. Why should you include events as well as tasks? Jotting down the day’s events will, over time, give you a clear picture of key habits and trends.

- Notes are represented with a dash. What should you note? Anything that captures your attention! Mark a particularly inspiring note with an exclamation point.

It’s often useful to use tasks or events as anchors in your bujo and to expand on these anchors using notes. Elaborate on an event like “Performance review with boss” with notes like “try and collaborate more with other departments.”


4. Bullet journaling embraces chaos with a flexible modular system.

- A regular diary allocates the same amount of space for each day. A bujo embraces the fact that every day is different. So, how does it work?

The daily log is where you note the day’s tasks and capture its experiences. Jot down a page number and the date, and you’re good to go! Don’t allocate space for your daily log in advance. Some days your log will run to a few pages. Other days you’ll have less to log. - The monthly log is your month-at-a-glance, and it typically takes up a double-page spread. The left-hand page is your calendar page. On the outer edge of this page, list the date for every day in the month, followed by the first letter of the weekday – so, M for Monday. Leave space to write down events and add in signifiers to denote upcoming tasks or note memorable experiences next to each date as you go through the month. The right-hand page is your tasks page, where you list the things you need or want to do that month.

- Want to note a task that falls outside the current month? That’s where the future log comes in. This is where you queue all your upcoming tasks. At the start of each new month, scan your future log, and add the next tasks you want to tackle to your new monthly log.

- Tracking a goal or establishing a habit? That’s where custom collections come in. These are special logs devoted to a specific topic. Fertility planning, your freelance side hustle, a meditation practice – anything you like!

- How do you keep track of all these collections? Through the index, which lives at the front of your notebook. Plan to devote four pages to your index. Use your index to list your collections as you add them to the notebook, along with their page numbers. For collections that are interspersed throughout your notebook, simply list all the pages where they live. For example, “Meal Planning: pg. 18-24; 67-69.” Don’t worry if you run out of index pages. Simply continue your index on the next free page, making a note of that page at the end of the old index.


5. Migrating tasks and events is key to finding your focus.

- So how does the monthly migration work? At the end of each month, set up your log for the next month. Start by scanning through your stack, or the collections you’re currently using. You’ll probably find some unfinished tasks. There’s no shame in that! Now, consider each one. Is this task still vital or meaningful? If yes, migrate it to your new monthly log, a custom collection, or your future log. Perhaps the task no longer feels necessary. Great! You can simply cross it out.

- Plan to do another migration at the end of your year of bullet journaling. This time, migrate from your old notebook to a new one. Your yearly migration is an opportunity for mindful reflection. When you look through your stack of collections after one year of journaling, you’ll get a snapshot of how you spent your time and energy in the previous 12 months.

- Here’s where you’ll need to make some hard decisions. How does the “life snapshot” from your old bullet journal compare to the life you want? Have you spent too much time and energy on things that don’t give your life meaning? Think carefully about what tasks, habits, and experiences you want to try to bring with you into this fresh year – and which you’d prefer to leave behind.

- When master martial artist Bruce Lee shared his formula for success, he advised: “Hack away the unessential.” With every migration, you’re following Lee’s advice by leaving behind what no longer serves you and getting closer to the core of what’s important.

6. Clarify and prioritize your goals to make them a reality.

- But when our goals aren’t meaningful, we’re way less likely to achieve them.

- So, how can we set sustainable, meaningful goals? And, equally important, how can we achieve those goals?

- Use your bullet journal to organize and clarify your goals by creating a goal collection. This is a page or two where you list your goals, no matter how big or small. Simply writing down your goals will help you transform them from vague desires and daydreams into concrete objectives.

- Next, create a timeline for achieving them. Here’s a simple trick you can try: the 5-4-3-2-1 method. Go through your goals collection and identify goals you’d like to achieve in the next five years. Then, find goals you’d like to achieve in the next four months. Repeat the process for the next three weeks, two days, and finally, for the next one hour.

You might have a lot of goals at this point. So, it’s time to prioritize. Look through your 5-4-3-2-1 list and interrogate each goal one by one. Does this goal really resonate with you? Will achieving this goal be worth the time, effort, and resources you’ll need to complete it? Ideally, you should identify one personal and one professional goal in each of your timeframes. That’s ten goals in total.

- Now, just because you’ve set your priorities doesn’t mean you have to stick to them at all costs. Particularly when it comes to long-term goals, it’s crucial to check in with yourself periodically and re-evaluate whether those goals still hold meaning.

One fun way to do this is a goal sprint: a method used to break a big-picture goal down into smaller components. Let’s say it's your goal to become a published author. Your sprint could be to write the first three chapters of a novel. By doing this, you’ll get to test whether your heart’s really in it and get a taste for the amount of work involved in reaching this goal.


7. Train yourself to be present through time-management strategies.

- Bujo can make you feel like you’re defying the laws of time. Time may be a finite resource, but our experience of time is relative. When we’re unfocused, simple tasks can take hours to complete. When we’re on autopilot, hours can slip by in what feels like minutes. But when we’re fully present, we can accomplish great things in a short amount of time.

- Are there certain tasks that you dread? It’s easy to drag your feet over tedious to-do items. Before you know it, you’ve scrolled mindlessly online for five hours, all to avoid sending a five-minute email. Fight your procrastination with time-boxing. Don’t just write down a task; allot a chunk of time or a time box in which to complete it. Try to keep that time box short, too. You’ll be amazed how quickly you can find your focus when you only have 30 minutes to get something done. Break down larger tasks, like filing taxes, into smaller components, like gathering receipts or compiling expenses, and allot a short time box to each.

- Another simple yet effective time-management strategy is scheduling. The order in which you tackle your tasks can seriously impact your success rate. Be honest: do you deal with the day’s most demanding or unappealing tasks first? Or do you create a false sense of productivity by front-loading your to-do list with easy and enjoyable tasks?

- Don’t schedule your hardest task last. Your attention and motivation will be frayed by the time you tackle it – if you tackle it at all. Getting difficult jobs out of the way early and saving the fun stuff for afterward will make the rest of your day feel more manageable and more enjoyable.

- Don’t just think about what you need to do. Make it a practice to consider when you need to do it and how long you should do it for. You’ll soon feel like you’ve found extra hours in the day.

8. There are no limits to your bullet journal’s potential.

- But why stop at basic? Now it’s time for the fun part: experimenting with hacks, add-ons, and extra-credit activities that will take your bujo practice to the next level.

- Here are a few nifty ways you could consider customizing your bullet journal.

- Your monthly and yearly migrations are a great opportunity to pause and reflect on your goals and take stock of the progress you’re making toward them. But if there’s something specific you’re working toward, daily habit tracking can help keep you on target.

- Let’s say you’re trying to save money, so you’ve decided to bring a packed lunch to work. Add a column to your monthly log with an intuitive header, like “L” for lunch. Make a checkmark in the column each time you bring your own lunch. You’ll be able to see how well you’re meeting your goal. You’ll also be able to cross-check with other events to see how they impact on your goal. For example, you might notice that days when you stay late at the office are followed by days where you’re not motivated to pack your own lunch.

- A bujo isn’t a traditional journal where you unpack your thoughts and feelings. But it can be! It’s easy to incorporate long-form journaling into your bujo practice. As you fill out your daily log, you may find there are some notes you’d like to think about further. Simply convert the dash symbol used before a note into a plus-sign symbol, signaling that this is a note you’d like to come back to and reflect on. When you have time – perhaps once a week – dig out those plus-sign notes and spend some time journaling about them.

- These are just two of the ways you can customize your bullet journal. Hungry for more? Get involved in the bujo community through social media platforms like Instagram and Pinterest. There, you’ll find countless bujo fans sharing the inspiring ways they’ve personalized their own journals, through gratitude logs, custom calendars, and more.



Bibliography:


Ryder Carroll. (2022, June 06). Book Source. Personal. The Bullet Journal Method.


Note:


These are all personal notes and reviews for self referencing; The self interpretations are not meant for any profit or marketing.



Suggestion to readers :


Please read the entire book. Suggested.




--------------------------------------Thank you, Gratitude, Love and Light-----------------------------------

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