Goal Planner
Jan. 4th, 2020 03:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Did you make a list of New Year's resolutions, goals, habits, themes, or the like? Panda Planner can help you keep those plans on track. It's a daybook designed not for appointments (although you can use it for that too) but for personal growth and productivity. \o/
Free goal planner
Date: 2020-01-04 10:08 pm (UTC)https://bestself.co/pages/self-journal-pdf
As usual, I use the parts that work with my brain and don't print things like a daily page. (Tracking my time that way would take so much effort, I'd get NOTHING else done except maybe eating. Maybe.)
The Passion Planner is similar, has a dated and undated version, plus several languages in pritable .pdf.
https://passionplanner.com/free-downloads/
Of the two, I prefer the latter, while Panda Planner is a buy-only option and I do not like bound journals for a multitude of reasons (Repurposing daily pages, already printed, would take far too long to be feasible, and the visual clutter of white-out or overmarking would drive me bonkers.)
Note that both options are free to download and print, and have enough in common to allow me to mix and match comfortably.
Re: Free goal planner
Date: 2020-01-04 10:22 pm (UTC)There are many, many planners spanning static electronic, active app, printable, and buyable formats. What you use depends on what you need. My daybook is the Witches' Datebook week-at-a-glance calendar that I get as a contributor copy from Llewellyn. Use what works for you.
Regarding specific features, there is a vast variety and if you're willing to hunt through the options, you can probably find one with the features you want whether that's a water counter, sleep record, appointments, to-do list, daily gratitudes, or whatever. I have even seen versions, usually on apps or printables, that let you pick which features you want to see on your calendar. Of all the options, that seems like one most worth paying for to me.