2019 Planner Ideas

Somehow as soon as Christmas is over, my mind starts racing about the New Year. I haven’t been bullet journaling or doing anything productivity tracking related for months. Pregnancy and life with my littles has knocked the wind out of my sails in terms of goal hustling (see previous post), but there’s something about January 1 that inspires me again.

I even thought about starting to work out again! This is funny mostly because I’m actually on Doctor ordered “reduced mobility” for a few weeks due to some concerning contraction patterns. So exercise is not a good idea.

So now I’ve been bit by the New Year bug and it got me thinking about planners.

Bullet Journaling vs Planners

Somehow I haven’t been blogging much about bullet journaling, but I’ve posted quite a bit on my personal Instagram over the years. I really like it because of the flexibility. You can do what you want from week to week and if you fall out of the habit, you don’t have all kinds of blank pages to remind you of that lost habit!

However, like many of you (and the reason so many told me you haven’t given it a try), I no longer have/make the time for it. It used to be an enjoyable therapeutic thing to do lots of colouring and designing on it. No longer. I’ve still been using my “bujo” to make and keep lists. It’s become a more minimalist bujo, which is still very useful. What you might find more useful, is a bullet journal-type planner that is already set-up for you. Or, you like a traditional style. I never have. I keep all of my day planning appointments etc in my Google Calendar app on my phone. Everything else is in my planner. Usually this means, meal plans, daily trackers, and to-do lists. Lately, it means only meal plans and to-do lists.

Check out the summary list below. Click on the pictures to be linked to Amazon to see more photos and features. You can also find the whole list here.

Traditional(ish) Planners

Orange Circle Studio 2019 Do It All Planner

Do It All Planner

Who it’s good for:

  • if you’re tracking a few different things in a day. This could be either different family members or home life and work life etc.
  • if you like pretty things. There are 5 different cover styles to choose from

Features:

  • stickers
  • spiral bound
  • colourful

Katie Daisy 2018 – 2019 On-the-Go Weekly Planner:

katiedaisyplanner

Who it’s good for:

  • if you like pretty things
  • if you don’t need a lot of space to write what you need to

Features:

  • 17-moth planner (starts in 2018)
  • colourful
  • fun quotes
  • spiral bound

DayDesigner:

daydesignerWho it’s good for:

  • People who have daily to-do lists
  • If you don’t need your schedule written down
  • you like a little colour

Features:

  • to-do lists each day
  • space for weekly top 3 priorities, notes, gratitude
  • inspirational quotes
  • goal pages at the beginning
  • comes in 2 sizes and multiple cover designs
  • monthly tabs
  • spiral bound

OrganizeIt Weekly Planner:

OrganizeItWho it’s good for:

  • Someone who doesn’t need a ton of space each day
  • Weekly notes/summary area. One reviewer explained, “at the end of each week there are both a notes page and a preview page to write down those tasks of importance for the upcoming month.”

Features:

  • softcover
  • several design options
  • black and white interior
  • cost-effective (between $10-$15)
  • inspirational quotes

Pretty Simple Planner:

letmepencilyouinWho it’s good for:

  • Someone who likes the DayDesigner but wants a slimmer/softcover version
  • Likes fairly minimalist interior

Features:

  • daily to-do lists
  • multiple cover options
  • softcover
  • minimalist interior

Nomatic Planner

nomaticweek1Who it’s good for:

  • someone who needs lots of functionality and features

Features:

  • whiteboard paper
  • 3 bookmarks
  • a pen holder elastic
  • 2 elastics to keep pages in place and book closed
  • comes in black and mint covers
  • hardcover

Blueline DoodlePlan 

doodleplanner

Who it’s good for:

  • Someone who likes colouring more than planning
  • If you don’t need much space for planning but do need somewhere to write things down

Features:

  • Spiral bound
  • Colouring pages
  • Monthly and Weekly spreads

Panda Planner Colour

Panda Planner Colour

Who it’s for:

  • Someone who likes colouring pages as well as a full action planner
  • Someone who wants space for daily schedules

Features:

  • colouring pages
  • Weekly spreads with daily columns
  • weekly tasks, priorities, daily gratitude space, daily thankful space

Minimalist (Undated) Day Planner by Action Publishing

minimalist-plannerWho it’s good for:

  • a true minimalist
  • someone who likes to colour or draw on their pages

Productivity Planners

The SELF Journal: The Day Planner, Goal Setting System, Journal for Doers

SELFplannerWho it’s good for:

  • People who like to record more than just what they’re doing in a day
  • Goal oriented people

Features:

  • smaller design
  • space for weekly priorities, space for reflection, daily goals, big-picture goals
  • a part of a productivity series that includes weekly action pads etc.
  • fairly minimalist design

High Performance Planner

High Performance PlannerWho it’s good for:

  • If you read and enjoyed High Performance Habits, this follows that system
  • Someone who needs constant prompts and guidance in reaching their goals/productivity desires

Features:

  • A LOT of prompts and guides on every page.
  • Daily, weekly, monthly reviews etc

The Clever Fox Planner

cleverfoxWho it’s good for:

  • Contains an organizer, calendar and gratitude journal to boost productivity, happiness and hit your goals in 2019
  • A bullet journaler who doesn’t have time to do daily layouts
  • Someone who likes to record daily tasks, reflections, habit trackers etc

Features:

  • black or brightly coloured covers (blue, pink, purple, rose, orange, turquoise, black)
  • stickers!
  • daily habit tracking space
  • main goals, priorities, to-do list space, daily dot grid section for jots
  • other planning pages throughout the book including mind map space

Full Focus Planner

FullFocusWho it’s good for:

  • If you love Michael Hyatt and his systems
  • Claims to help set annual goals, increase focus, eliminate overwhelm, and achieve your biggest goals on top of being an agenda organizer

Features:

  • Daily spreads include a page for tasks, lists, and trackers, and a second page for notes
  • two ribbons
  • Goal Templates – to detail the specifics of your goals and help you reach them faster.
    Ideal Week Template – to plot out what your perfect week should look like.
    Monthly Calendars – to get a glimpse of the entire year when you plan your big goals.
    Rolling Quarters – to get a closer look at your quarters when planning.
    Daily Rituals – to design routines for your mornings and evenings that make you extra productive.
    Daily Pages – to plan your days with your to-do lists and priorities separated.
    Weekly Review – to look back, correct what went wrong, and make the next week better than the last.
    Quarterly Review – to celebrate the wins of your quarter and move forward with confidence.

Productivity Planner by Intelligent Change

productivity-plannerWho it’s good for:

  • Amazon says it’s frequently purchased with the book The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson
  • Someone who mainly wants to keep tabs on their daily movement toward goals and productivity

Features:

  • undated daily pages
  • smaller size
  • Weekly and daily planning pages + a weekly review page

Cossac Planner

CosacCleanWho it’s good for:

Features:

  • Premium quality ivory colour paper (100 GSM)
  • Simple and highly functional journal layout
  • Habit+Health tracker
  • 2 bookmarks + 2 elastic bands
  • Back and front pockets
  • Non-dated calendar
  • Eco-friendly materials

Morning Sidekick Journal

Morning JournalWho it’s good for:

  • A morning routine person who wants to track day and and goals
  • Someone who needs guidance in achieving their goals: “Our morning planner uses 3 phases to help you get the ball rolling and keep up momentum with your morning productivity, morning energy, and overall health”

Features:

  • Multi-phase planning system
  • Daily tips bite-sized, actionable piece of content that you can apply immediately to improving your mornings.

Let me know!

In the past I have tried Simplified Planner, Passion Planner, and the Action Method Book. None of them ever really “stuck” for me. Out of all of these, I think the one I’m the most interested in is the Clever Fox Planner because it has the most features like what I would write out in my bujo.

Was this helpful? Do you have other planners to add? Leave me a comment with suggestions or whether you went ahead and bought one of these (these are not affiliate links). If you want to look at them all in a smaller list, you can find them on this Amazon list I made.

Goal hustling with the long-view in mind

Alternatively titled, “Goal hustling as a mom of littles”

When I first started this blog, I knew I was going to have kids. Or at least, that was our plan. So I knew that as I formed the purpose for this blog, I knew that I was going to have to have something that was going to be able to survive years of “goal drought” or slower periods where striking things off my bucket list were few and far between because of the demands of diapers, tantrums, potty training, breastfeeding, etc.

Initially, my transition to motherhood was rough. Going from being a goal hustler to being a mom at home felt very suffocating. I loved my son and I enjoyed him, but it felt a bit like my entire life was on hold — everything I was made to be was on hold to raise a family. I’ve settled more into my role as mom and so I no longer feel that way exactly but I admit at times I do lean in that direction.

Long-term thinking

Part of what brings success to reaching our goals is being able to have long-term thinking. I’ve been a mom for 4 years now (which I know is nothing compared to some of you who are reading— hi mom!), and I’ve finally gone through enough stages of childrearing to know they do grow up and few things lasts forever. The poop jokes for boys are still going strong, though. And when they’re learning a second language there’s even more to choose from!

The last few months, I have been restless. I’ve been looking ahead too much to what I want to accomplish when my kids are less dependent on me. This has been unhelpful because I’m not there yet. It means I haven’t been entirely present in my home or have felt resentful of where I’m at in life. Living resentfully is not at all what I want for my life. Thankfully, I’ve had some personal insight into why I’ve been feeling this way and how I can get my head back into being present for my family and happy about it.

Over the last year I’ve also been into a personality test that has been super helpful for me to understand why I am the way I am and what makes me different. This has also been super enlightening for helping me to lean into the hard parts and be more patient.

Anyways, back to the long-term thinking.

If you’re motivated by goals and feel stuck with where you’re at, I’ve found it helpful to make goals related to where you are. If you’re stuck because of an illness, decide who you want to be in that illness. If you’re feeling stuck because of career issues or dissappointments, decide what kind of person you want to be in that. These character related goals at least give something to work towards when you feel like it’s all out of control.

Who, not just what

A lot of the goals on my Bucket List are things I want to accomplish. I don’t think any of them say anything at all about what kind of person I want to be. I certainly have these ideas in mind as well, I just have never written them down on my Bucket List. Lately I’ve been focusing more on my character goals rather than my accomplishments. I’ve also been working on the long-term goals of raising my children to not be incarcerated!!! Low bar, I know, but some days I wonder with the consistent ignoring me and lack of obedience if there’s any hope for them #kiddingnotkidding

Honestly, though, as I sit back and stop being so tightly wound about being a published book author or running a marathon (both nowhere on the horizon), I am reminded that having raised good human beings is actually at the top of my list of concerns. Also, having a loving intact marriage at the end of all of it too.

So in light of these things, how have I been working at my goals the last 6 months? Things are going pretty well, I’d say. A lot of my habits have fallen apart again and as a result an obvious chaos has entered our lives. I’d like to get those things back in order again: bullet journaling to keep the swirling thoughts in order, mornings in prayer and my Bible, and actually thinking about meals. Exercise has been put in the back burner as I’m cooking a third baby.

Keep at it, friends!

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