Bullet Journal for the Badminton Life

I love notebooks. I have notebooks for diary, to-do list, notebooks with lists, notebooks with travel plans, notebooks with future plans, notebooks for writing and more than a few blank notebooks I have never used yet I loved them too much to NOT buy them. I’ve also been tracking my exercise and badminton playing in a health notebook and I made my own five-minute journal because I was too cheap to buy the real thing. (The five-minute journal is where you start each morning listing three things you are grateful for, some goals for the day and an affirmation. Then in the evening you write three amazing things from your day and one improvement you could have made. It’s a good way to focus on the positive while also evaluating what you could have done better. Click here for more info.)

As much as I love my phone, there is no substitute for writing things down and having notebooks.

I’ve heard about bullet journals for awhile, and while I was intrigued, I had never done it before. A bullet journal is a journal that is handmade and unique to the person who made it. You can use it to keep track of goals, write your diary, keep a to-do list, tracker, basically anything you want. It’s like a diary mixed with a planner and a to-do list. And you make it yourself and can gussy it up as cute as you want.

I wanted it to be for badminton, but also for everything I need in my daily life. One notebook I could carry around instead of relying on a few scattered everywhere. I wanted not only my tracking, but my to-do list, my schedule, my five-minute journal, my planner and a place to keep track of a few other things like my reading.

So I went to the Moleskine store, picked up a new dotted blank journal, sat in Starbucks with a ruler, a pencil and a good eraser and started planning exactly what I wanted. I looked a lot at pictures on Pinterest and other websites for design ideas. This is what I ended up with:

You can see at the top I have written “Gratitude” which is where I write, in the morning, three things I’m grateful for. The second area is labeled badminton, where I can say where I played, for how long and how I felt. The third is three amazing things from the day that I write at night and one sentence at the bottom for how I could have improved my day.

I also have three boxes on the side. One for my to-do list, one for listing my exercise outside of badminton, and one for tracking. With the help of apps, I keep track of my water intake, steps in a day, how much sleep I get, how long I fasted (I do intermittent fasting, more on that later) and what medicine or supplements I have taken.

It’s neat and concise and lets me track the basics. I have 4 days on a page, and after 7 days I have a small calendar of the week:

This is where I can write my weekly schedule and where I keep track of general “to-do” things that don’t have a specific day.

Then at the end of the month I have a summary page.

This was the month of January when I got sick and ended up in the hospital. I stopped tracking for more than a week, ’cause, well, I was in the hospital and couldn’t be bothered. Although aside from drinking water I certainly didn’t do anything else for almost two weeks.

I keep track of everyday I reach my water goals (2.3 liters), everyday I publish a blog post (I have three blogs so I’m going to start differentiating by color), which days I play badminton, which days I do writing (any writing counts–blogs, diary, or my novel), the days I surpass 10,000 steps (I walked 10,000 steps everyday for more than a year but I have since stopped that), and the days I mediate–a habit I want to form, yet I’m not so good at.

I am also a big reader. Before badminton I read 100 books a year, but last year I only managed to read 52. I’ve always kept a list in a notebook but now that I have a bullet journal I figured why not make it as cute as possible?

After I finish a book I write the title on a spine.

I also want to keep track of the movies I watch, but I think I watch a lot. So I wanted a lot of space:

The actual movies (and compete seasons of TV shows) I’ve watched since Jan 1st. Go ahead, judge me.

I’m going to change the color in the movie list and it will go from red to orange to yellow to blue and so on. By the time the pages are finished it should be as colorful as the rainbow. Right now I’m still in the red zone.

In fact, the whole thing is super colorful and I love flipping through the finished pages:

After all, a bullet journal and tracking diary is only good if you use it! So I always put it on my desk first thing in the morning so I have no excuse to forget it. I had trouble while I was in the hospital keeping up with it consistently. Like my friend who visited said,”must be hard to come up with three amazing things when your stuck in the hospital all day.” He was right, but isn’t that actually the time that it is most important to do it?

And I’ve found tracking actually encourages you to do it. I hate leaving a section blank, or having holes in my month summary just because I was too lazy to do something. Like, I’ve started doing meditation a lot more just because I want to see those cute little boxes filled in. I know maybe that’s not the best reason, but if it creates a healthy habit, who’s to argue? Also with being sick and traveling my badminton section has been pathetically empty. I want to start filling that up again but with spring festival coming (Chinese new year) there will be few courts or people to play with…sigh…

I’m not a person with good handwriting or the patience to sit down and draw little things with precision. I’m a bit sloppy, my handwriting isn’t that great and I can’t draw a straight line to save my life, but I love my little bullet journal! I bring it with me everywhere and it is keeping me on track, keeping me positive and it’s a great brief record of what’s been happening in my life.

If you are interested in doing your own bullet journal, you can read this buzzfeed article for more information but of course Pinterest is the place to go for real inspiration. I think constant tracking and monitoring can only help improve your badminton and at the very least can show you how much you have accomplished.

 

4 Comments

  1. Mike C

    Recently found your page and i find it very interesting!

    If it’s possible, could you ask your coaches if during tournaments, they bring a notebook and jot things down? I have always wondered what badminton coaches write down when they watch their players games…….

    Reply
  2. Victor

    Such an awesome post, love it, love the idea, so organised.

    Reply
    1. Becky (Post author)

      I know, I can’t wait until the end of the year when it is all filled up. But it took me a couple of days to make so when I finish one I’ll have to make another, that’s a pain. 😉

      Reply
      1. Victor

        That’s what makes it unique, wouldn’t be the same if it was just photocopied. We should see done of these entries periodically.

        Reply

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