How to Keep a Calendar
Updated:2008/04/28
How to Keep a Calendar
Whether your calendar is personal, professional, academic or
social; whether your calendar lives in your pocket, in a planner, on your wall, or on
your computer or PDA, a few
general tips can help keep you sane and organized.
Steps
- Choose the right calendar for you. No one calendar is right for
everybody, but you should consider these factors.
- Portability. Will this calendar need to go with you to meetings
or gatherings? If so, choose something that fits easily in a pocket
or purse.
- Space to write. Even if the calendar you use to decorate has
pretty pictures or funny sayings, the calendar you use to track
your appointments should, above all, have plenty of space to write
down your appointments.
- A format that you like. There are calendars for the calendar
year (January-December), for the school year (August through July),
for lots of writing, for saving space, by days, by weeks, by
months. Shop around during calendar season or back-to-school season
to find the right one for you.
- Space for related information. Should it have a phone list or
book attached? Pockets for bills? Space for a daily to-do list or
journal entry?
- Visibility. Will the whole family refer to this calendar, or
would you prefer to keep it private and personal?
- Keep your calendar handy, and keep a pen or pencil close by. If
it's not there when you schedule your appointments, you can't write
them down or check against prior commitments. Whether that means
leaving it to your purse or tacking it to your wall, make a point
to have it with you:
- In class.
- On your desk.
- By your phone.
- Wherever you open your mail.
- During gatherings, meetings, or outings.
- Anytime.
- Write appointments and tasks in it as soon as you learn or
think of them. You can also write in reminders for yourself ahead
of time. Do you need to book reservations for August when it's
still April? Could you save time buying all your greeting cards for
the month (or year) at once? Write those events in both
places.
-
Refer to your calendar frequently. Look at it every time you
schedule anything new. Take a minute each morning or evening (or
both; whatever works best for you) to look ahead to tomorrow and
next week, at the least. Your daily visit to your calendar is also
a good time to write down anything you heard about that day but
didn't yet record, and to look ahead for possible conflicts.
- If you use an electronic calendar, such as on your computer or
PDA, set reminders to pop up in advance of your appointments. Most
good systems allow you to adjust the reminder time, so set it so
that you have enough warning. Leave yourself time to prepare a
homework assignment or presentation. Leave yourself time to stop
what you're doing travel to whatever you're attending.
- If you use an electronic calendar, learn to set up recurring
appointments. Your spouse's birthday and your parents' anniversary will occur on the same
day each year. Perhaps you have a class or meeting every Tuesday at
3pm or rent is due on the first of every month. Your computer or
PDA can alert you about something each month, week, or year.
Tips
- Schedule yourself free time, too. We all need a bit of downtime
to do what we enjoy, catch up on our sleep, have some fun, and be with friends and family.
If you're very busy, write in your free time in advance to reserve
it.
- When switching to next year's calendar, look back through last
year's. Write down any birthdays or anniversaries that you want to
keep. Also write down anything you do annually, even if you haven't
specifically scheduled it yet.
- Keep one central calendar or at most, one for you and one for
the family. More calendars will not make you more organized.
- Writing in pencil or keeping an electronic calendar can make it
much easier to change your schedule quickly.
- Your calendar can help you cut down on paper. If you receive
something that requires attention at a particular time later on,
file only the paper you will need again. Write the details in your
calendar, along with where you filed the paper.
- Experiment with your calendar and your habits to learn what
works best for you.
- If you like, use colors and stickers to draw your attention to
certain items in your calendar, to personalize it, and to make it
more fun. There's no reason that a calendar has to be bland and
boring.
Warnings
- Your calendar is a tool. It doesn't control you; you control
it. Be flexible about your schedule and don't worry if you don't
always do things just because they're in your calendar.