Who here has a monthly schedule as interesting as Amy Wong’s monthly schedule?
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wow I have truly been sleeping on Notion as a life organization and planning tool
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The first thing I did was look at my day planner — I am over-organized as ever, even on the brink of disaster.
Keri Blakinger, Corrections in Ink: A Memoir (St. Martin's Press, June 7, 2022)
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Plans for tomorrow [01/18/23]
Wake up at 6am and have a boiled egg or two with some coffee as pre workout meal.
Go for walk at 6:45am
Arrive home at 7:15am and stretch full body.
Do full body strength workout then stretch again.
Drink a glass of water and have breakfast.
Clean room.
Shower and brush teeth.
Begin studying session with breaks.
Have lunch at 3pm.
Continue with study session with breaks.
Have dinner at 7pm.
Drink a glass of water at 8pm.
Shower and brush teeth.
Be ready in bed by 10pm.
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Slept 6.5 hours which is pretty good. Going to brush my teeth and drink my fresh press juice waiting for me in the fridge. Clean my study and put away the new notebooks and stickers I bought. After that go buy cat food and might take a little walk around the retail. Going to get a long, good sleep before work so I can be dressed to the nines again every day of the week in case it is the day I get chosen for a promotion after my colleague gets terminated.
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say yes as much as possible
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Do we have any planner people here??
After many years with Passion Planner, I’m converting to the My PA Planner!!
I’m so excited! Check out this planner that also helps you plan your business https://www.mypaplanner.com/?aff=66
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That post about keeping times and dates by simply adapting to using seconds since the Unix epoch reminded me of the extended period I spent in the 2000s attempting to live acording to fractional Julian days.
For background, just as Unix handles time by counting seconds since the epoch of 12:00:00 on January 1, 1970, Julian days are a count of days in the Julian period, which started January 1, 4713 BCE (on the proleptic Julian calendar; it's equivalent to November 24, 4714 BCE on the proleptic Gregorian calendar, or you can say -4712/-4713). It's a little unusual in that day 1 started at noon GMT/TT/UTC, so the changeover happens in the middle of the day in Europe, but since I was living in the Pacific time zone, that was less of a point of confusion.
I've also got to point out that back when appointments weren't all kept on computers, "professionals" used to carry around calendars from Day-Timer or Franklin, where we'd have the times of meetings or doctors' visits written down -- which is why I prepared day planners for just this purpose, to be printed out and held in a multi-ring binder, with notes for calendrical conversions, holidays, astronomical observations, and such:
(If I'm remembering the details, I wrote programs that would gather all the data points and insert them into a template in InDesign.)
But wait, you might say, isn't it difficult to keep track of time as a metric day, when you're figuring everything as a floating point number in the two millions? Well, it's really pretty straightforward; if you just consider the fractional part to three decimal places, the level of granularity is roughly the same as hours and minutes, and ordinary appointments rarely need more precision than that.
(Adding two more decimal places gets you to about the same level as seconds, as 0.00001 days are equal to .864 seconds, so I'd usually do that for clock displays just to be able to watch the time ticking.)
I got frustrated or bored with doing this all the time after a year or so, though I still have assorted tools for converting times to fractional julian days on different platforms kicking around; I keep meaning to put it together into an app for my phone, but you know how intentions can be.
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Has anyone tried one of those ADHD planners I keep seeing advertised online? I’m thinking about going back to a paper planner and I’m wondering if those actually work for people
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