1. Start with the daily log
  2. Move into a weekly spread or a master task list.
  3. Expand your practice to monthly layouts
  4. Use a Simple Habit Tracker.
  5. Consistency Creates Confidence

Came across this article while looking up some tips for starting bullet journal. This is pretty close to how I started, only with dailies, and then added other stuff over time.

Can be helpful for someone who is feeling overwhelmed with starting a bullet journal. You can just leave couple of pages on start empty, and start with daily log, and then fill in the other parts later, once you are used to it.

  • jgrim of SublinksA
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    1 year ago

    Like everything else it seems like you can make it however you want to. It would be easier to track over months but maybe not as easy to remember to do. Probably depends on the habit.

    • dresdenOPM
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, for instance, when I start a new day, I do the following:

      • Look at the monthly page, for any event (usually any anniversary or due date),
      • Look at the master tasks list. It’s the list where I move the tasks that I have to do “some-day” but not any specific day, I don’t directly add items to it, they are migrated from daily log. If there’s anything I want to (or can) do today, copy that.
      • Look at previous day, and copy or migrate any left-over items.

      On normal day, this hardly takes 30 seconds (other than writing down what’s moving to today). With this workflow, it’s easy to mark anything on monthly calendar. As I am looking at it daily anyway. That being said, I am not actually using any habit tracker right now. I have become a perfect being and don’t need to create any more habits. 😃