One of my favorite things about motherhood is getting to watch my son return to a place or try an activity a year or two later and see how much he has grown in that time. Something like going to a birthday party at an enormous gym that first felt overwhelming or chaotic now feels familiar and fun. With that same spirit, I’m reposting The Life Changing Magic of NOT Using a Planner, where I share a step-by-step guide to what I’m using instead. I originally posted this in January 2024, and now a year later I’m still very happy using this same approach. It was fun looking back, and I hope you’ll find this peek in my notebook helpful as you prepare for 2025! (Scroll down for the video if you want to skip to the how to.)
I got my first planner in sixth grade. That’s the first time I remember thinking, “If I just schedule everything, I can do it all.” Suddenly I was in charge of keeping track of projects that stretched over weeks and months, after-school performances, and birthdays. It felt grown up and promising. If I wrote something on paper, then I could look forward to it happening.
I liked choosing a planner each year. I looked for lots of writing space and chose the art carefully. I identified with my planner, and by the time I reached adulthood, I couldn’t imagine life without one. When I got married, I reluctantly started sharing a Google calendar with my husband. I tried to convert to all digital, but I couldn’t let go of my planner. It wasn’t just a tool. It was like a comfort item. I liked looking through the grids, making sure I hadn’t missed something, and planning, planning, planning.
But then I became a mother.
My life became a masterclass in patience, trust, and humility. I still made plans, but I couldn’t execute them. My identity as a list maker and planner eroded. I still met my deadlines, but my ability to work was fragile. Planning began to feel foolish and frustrating. I cancelled conferences and presentations, gave up friend time and alone time. I let go of personal projects and cried a lot. I felt adrift, like I was failing, even though I was really just rolling with the realities of being a mother in America. Our son was out of daycare as much as he was in it. Naps were unpredictable. Our nannies had kids who got sick too. And of course, the pandemic was the ultimate reminder that plans are meaningless.
I started 2023 not wanting to schedule myself into oblivion and wanting to shift the emphasis from getting things done, which felt endless and out of my control, to celebrating my accomplishments and leaving room for possibilities like being sick or changing my mind. I still wanted the grounding practice of writing things down, but I wanted to move from thinking about what I should do to noticing what I did do. So I started from scratch. I built my own system, inspired by the Japanese Kanban method. But my version was more about trying to avoid overwhelm than maximize productivity.
I started by thinking about what I wanted to track. In my case it was client work, creative projects, family tasks, and house projects. I did a huge brain dump onto tiny sticky notes. (I like these.) I wrote down every possible task, all my ideas, and anything I hoped to accomplish that year. If there was a due date, I added that to the sticky note. I found this process draining, so if you’re following along, maybe take a little break before moving on to the next steps.
Then I divided the sticky notes into three groups: Can Dos, In Progress, and Done. I set up three sections in my notebook, one for each section, along with space for reflecting and logging milestones each week. Each week, month, or whenever makes sense, I choose a few projects to move from the Can Do section to the In Progress section and I focus on these projects. (In the traditional Kanban method, you choose three projects to work on at a time, but sometimes I bend that rule.) Then when I’m done with a project—however long it takes—I move it to the Done section. This gives me a really good record of how much I’m accomplishing in the midst of chaos and illness.
(I like using this flat-lay notebook.)
In the Can-Do section I divided the tasks into subcategories like classes I might want to create and essays to pitch for publication. I also made a section for client work, althought those projects tend to go straight into the In Progress section when I get them. I also divided the In Progress section into Now and Coming Soon. That helps me look ahead and plan a bit, without getting too overwhelmed. You might have very different categories.
I still tend to make daily lists to help me stay focused and make progress, and I keep appointments in our shared Google calendar. But I don’t miss my planner at all! Part of what I like about this system is that when I record what happened each week, I include health challenges, work done on the house, trips, and fun moments that felt special, right alongside client work and career events. It feels more complete and more honest, because it reflects the complex reality of my days. Deadlines and priorities can shift, and I have some place to hold my ideas, so I don’t lose them.
I’ve been using this system for a full year now. I love being able to look back at my notes and celebrate all that has been accomplished. I’m constantly amazed at how much happened in a year. It is also extremely satisfying to see the sticky notes stack up at the back of the notebook. And if I decide not to do something, it doesn’t feel like a big deal to throw away a sticky note.
This feels like an idea that translates better to video, so here’s a quick tour of last year’s log.
I’m sharing this idea, not because I think you should duplicate it—feel free to try it if you like!—but really I want to encourage you to invent your own method. What works for me might not work for you. We’re different people with different lives. But maybe it’s time to try something new?
Let us know if you’re a planner person or not in the comments below. And if you’re not—what are you doing instead?
Nebula Notebook is a place to meet kindred spirits, get inspired, and learn how to find ease and joy in the creative process—even when life is bananas. 🍌🍌🍌
✏️ PS—The fastest way to grow as a writer is to book a manuscript critique or a creative coaching session with an expert. My clients get agents, sell books, and win awards. They also learn how to enjoy the creative process, so they can keep going when life gets hard. 👏
V cool!!
I love this. I used to bullet journal and have let it fall by the wayside in the last 3 years in favor of digital planning, but I think there's something to physically writing things out, and I just bought a new journal for this year! 🥳