

I decided I wanted to give Bullet Journaling a try, but more specifically wanted to try a Digital Bullet Journal (DigiBuJo). I liked the system, and what it meant, but I also knew that much of what I read and watched could be applied digitally with the right tools and app.
Goodnotes 5 bullet Pc#
I’m a techie, and the idea of pen-to-paper is the equivalent of a real-life PC Load Letter error for me. Most folks (from what I can tell) advocate pen-to-paper for a Bullet Journal. You can find a much better explanation of it in the “How to Bullet Journal” video. You notate what happens with each entry by using the bullets (or some signifying markup). Iterating allows you to decide if entries need moved (perhaps to a new month) or deleted as no longer worth your time. The beauty of the bullet journal is that each time you review (adding, completing, or moving) items, you bring mindfulness of your tasks at hand and iterate on the need to keep the remaining entries. Finally, you start your Daily logs, which is the list of entries (tasks, events, and notes) you curate day-to-day via rapid logging (short bulleted sentences). Next, you start the Monthly Log to capture all the meaningful things you need to do that month and the time you have to accomplish them. As you start a Bullet Journal, you first set up the Future Logs and add their page numbers to the Index. Bullet Journaling BasicsĪ bullet journal consists of an Index, Future Logs, Monthly Logs, Daily Logs, and Collections. By doing so, there was less chance of forgetting things, and the repetition of writing helped bring mindfulness to the list. Bullet Journaling was born of a need to bring all the ideas/tasks/events plaguing us in the digital age and put them to paper in a single place.

A bullet journal is flexible, allowing you to organize tasks, events, collections (groups of tasks, ideas, and more).

For those of you uninitiated, think of bullet journaling as an extensible planner with a heavy focus on the index to help bring order to chaos. Last year, my wife introduced me to an entirely foreign-to-me concept of journaling known as Bullet Journaling.
