Blank notebooks9/20/2023 ![]() ![]() Plus, it’s easier to follow something written out on paper. You don't want to be looking at screens before bed, so referring to your phone for your bedtime routine is not the best idea! 5. I recommend using paper because it’s more tangible and the process of writing the routine out by hand gets cemented in your brain more. The list goes on! You can tweak your routines as you try new things and get rid of old steps. So use your notebook to keep track of different routines that you have, whether it’s a morning routine, bedtime routine, daily/ weekly/ monthly planning routine, Sunday routine, etc. Well, isn't a new routine basically a goal to do something consistently? I’m sure you’ve heard that writing down your goals helps you achieve them. Or you can just laugh with your friends about how stupid your dreams are, that works too (I recently had the most mundane dream where I was having dinner with extended family and giving them tips for managing e-mail. I’m not very good at remembering my dreams and when I wake up I can hardly crawl over to my phone fast enough to type them out!Ĭonsistent dream journaling, however, will make this process easier because it’ll train your mind to start remembering your dreams.Īnd then? You can analyze the patterns you see in your dreams and deduce what they mean, or even try to learn lucid dreaming (a dream state in which you are aware that you are dreaming and can control the dream). Record your dreamsĭreams are fascinating, but they are also incredibly fleeting. ![]() Taking notes while you read or watch will help you remember everything you’re taking in and make the time you’re investing in education worthwhile. ![]() You can also watch YouTube videos (this is how I learned most of what I know about Photoshop and Premiere), and read books (yes, those big, paper things you get at libraries or bookstores). So don't just skip over this first idea! Seriously, tryyy it.Įven if you’re not a student doesn’t mean you have an excuse to not be learning things! There are plenty of sites out there that offer resources to learn and improve skills.Įxamples:, Coursera, Udemy, Skillshare, Khan Academy, CreativeLive, etc. In fact, journaling is one of my most important habits and I’ve blogged a lot about how you can use it to live your best life. It’s just the most obvious and simple use for a notebook. I hope I’m not turning you off the idea of journaling by calling it a “plain old diary”. So grab those unloved notebooks, a pen, and let’s start filling them up! 1. There are plenty of good reasons out there to put pen to crisp, clean paper. So in the spirit of minimalism, mindful buying, and using everything to its full potential, I decided to put together this extensive list of ideas for ways to use those empty pages. The next best alternative is leaving the blank notebook in a lonely drawer somewhere. The problem is, once you come home, you don't want to spoil the pages until you've got the best idea for how to use them. I’ve always been drawn to the stationery aisle, oohing and aahing over the pretty covers and flipping through the fresh pages, full of creative possibilities. I've got a little of everything here, from meaty journals to small notepads you could pop in a (reasonably-sized) pocket.How many empty notebooks do you have? Half-empty notebooks? Notebooks with the first page filled out and then nothing but sad, blank pages after that? Don’t worry ) There are lots of people on this boat. Let's take a dive into some really rad blank journals and notebooks you can pick up. And frankly, I don't judge you if you do the same or if you collect blank notebooks simply because you like how they look. That said, I'm always looking at the next great blank journals and notebooks, if for no other reason than their aesthetic value. I use a notebook for writing ideas, a small notepad for brain dumps and to-dos, and several other journals are strewn about the house collecting any number of things. I've got one notebook I keep all of the quotes I use for yoga in, which has some great divided sections where I can also pop in notes I have for sequence ideas or short entries about teaching/my students' experiences where appropriate. I do use my blank journals and notebooks, but not at a rate consistent with their acquisition. I don't know what is - anxiety, maybe? - that keeps me from using the stash of blank journals and notebooks I have, but I can never resist picking up more whenever I run across one that looks like it's *perfect* for (fill in the blank purpose that's never actually executed). ![]() Do you own too many blank journals and blank notebooks? Welcome to the club. ![]()
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