Of course, I still didn’t leave quite enough space for everything but it was easier to see the month-to-month progress. The binder format made it easier to add additional pages or move things around.
It was important to me that the retrospective was not about berating myself for not making progress, but to see how I spent my time in the prior month and whether to make adjustments in the next month. This was about awareness and progress, and not perfection and checking off all the goals. So after going through each goal/section, I would finish each month’s retrospective with a short summary/review of the month. Maybe I had a lot of trips, or there was stuff going on with the kid’s school, etc. - they weren’t necessarily excuses, though sometimes they were - or I added new goals/areas, or made deliberate decisions that changed the priority (like not doing anything scuba-related in the winter), or maybe I made a lot of progress and checked off some items. Then, I would take a sticky note and jot down what things I wanted to focus on for the next month. That sticky note would be moved around in the bujo as the days/weeks went by so I could make sure I added to-do items that would further my progress.
While there were plenty of goals where I made absolutely no traction, like writing 3 extra TPA articles (I don’t think I even managed ONE extra), or refreshing my scuba certification, there were quite a few items where I actually made progress or even finished projects! I managed to close a couple of long standing accounts, finished transcribing The Little Prince (original 2024 goal was to go from 74% to 90%, but I finished it in August!), read 20 books for the year (I ended up finishing 50 books!) and more.
Due to a lot of personal stuff going on, I haven’t had the mindspace to do a full 2024 retrospective, or come up with realistic 2025 goals. But when I’m ready, I want to reflect on 2024, celebrate accomplishments, and revisit items that didn’t get much traction. I plan to “table” some of last year’s goals so I don’t forget about them (like getting a motorcycle license), push forward on other goals (like getting from 55% to 65% of transcribing Meditations), and figure out other goals that I want to work on (like finally moving off my laptop to a newer machine that has been staring at me for a couple years). I was worried that making these goals would diminish my love of this hobby but it has really made me more mindful about how I’m spending my time to get more things done and more enjoyment out of life. Looking forward to continued growth and progress in 2025.