I last posted about my planner and to do list setup here. To recap, my planning system includes two large Moleskine hard cover squared notebooks, one in which I plan my week, and one in which I use as a daily to do planner. I started using this setup once Covid hit and I started working from home. It worked very well for a year and a half.
I was hospitalized for a month, in which I discovered that I have zero control over my time or how my day will shape out. When I got out I was already on a Chemo regiment. I had to make adjustments to my life, this time because of my personal health, not a global pandemic.
Score (another) one for self-made planners.
My old system was generic enough that it fit into my new lifestyle with very little adjustment. The weekly notebook stayed mostly the same, as you can see below. The main difference is that I manage less stuff there and more using reminders in Fantastical. It’s not that I don’t like paper planners any more, it’s just that Chemo Brain is a possible side effect of my treatment and I don’t want to risk not getting something important done because I forgot to check my weekly planner at the right moment, or I saw something there but didn’t remember it after I’ve seen it.
So why keep the weekly planner at all? Because it helps me see how the week is shaping up, and because it allows me to do a little long term planning, despite everything. All my plans at the moment are in two week batches (dictated by my chemo regiment), and this layout allows me to manage them.

Another addition to this notebook is a few tracker pages, marked by tabs. Some track purchases that I’m waiting for, some track bureaucracies that I need to take care of, others list things that I want to get done eventually but I haven’t decided yet when or how.
As for my daily planner notebook, I just finished one and started another. Here’s the finished notebook:

Here’s the new notebook. I love using these decals to make these notebooks my own:

I used to manage every day on a full spread, with personal to dos on one side of the page and professional ones on a another. Since my life is less busy now than it used to be, I’ve downsized my to do to one page per day, with personal and professional mixed in (I work from home). This is a sample of my least busiest day: it’s a chemo day and I wasn’t planning on working after this treatment since it was a long one. Door to door I was in the hospital from 6:40 to 14:00, and completely wiped out after it. I don’t usually list my meals or naps in my notebook, but chemo days are so crazy (in terms of what my brain does on steroids) that I have to write everything down. Things that I didn’t do get a strike in them and are moved forward to another day.

Everybody has different needs from their planner, and those needs oftentimes change unexpectedly, and out of sync with “planner season”. It’s one of the reasons why I find making your own planner, working just a few days or a week or two ahead is the best and most consistent way for me to manage my time. There are some great planning systems out there, but if you’ve struggled with using them, or if your circumstances make you need a very flexible system, I highly recommend picking up a squared or lined notebook and creating your own.
JP
I wholeheartedly agree with your recommendation to create your own system. Customize, experiment, make mistakes, and tinker away 🙂
All best!
LikeLiked by 1 person
writingatlarge
Thank you!
LikeLike
Tina Koyama
Thank you for sharing these… I love seeing others’ DIY planners! I made my own from A5 notebooks for years (when I freelanced), but after I retired, things settled down enough that I could use an off-the-shelf Leuchtturm weekly, and for the most part, it has worked out OK. I hope things settle down for you, too, when you’re done with treatments and they don’t rule your life. Take care.
LikeLiked by 1 person
writingatlarge
Thank you! I hope so too, but for now it’s so good to have a system that can change with my needs.
LikeLike
Diane
Hear hear for DIY planners! I love the flexibility. I put in a monthly grid for the first pages, then the rest are as needed and it works great for me too. I’m glad you already had such a flexible system in place before you got sick so that at least you didn’t have to spend too much mental energy on that. Take care.
LikeLiked by 1 person
writingatlarge
Thank you! Homemade planners are oftentimes the best planners. Nobody knows your needs better than yourself, after all.
LikeLike
bersinink
I’m a huge fan of DIY planners as well…they’re adaptable to whatever changes we make in our lives as well as the stuff life throws at us. Thanks for this post, and wishing you all the best.
LikeLiked by 1 person
writingatlarge
Thank you!
LikeLike
Pingback: Planning for Uncertainty – Writing at Large