New Year, New Semester, New Lease on Blog

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So, I know I haven’t posted in a while. I got really behind on school work, had a horrible bout of MRSA that required surgery (for those of you who don’t know, MRSA is an antibiotic resistant staff infection, usually starting as a small cut on your skin that becomes infected, and if untreated can cause horrible abscesses on your skin. Think of a REALLY BIG under-the-skin pimple. I mean softball sized. All those utterly disgusting pimple popping videos on youtube aren’t pimples but abscesses. The more you know.), and spent most of my winter break working as much as possible to make rent.

However this is a new semester! So instead of starting posts on organization mid-semester, I am going to start at the beginning. It is easier to stay organized if you start organized. I want to say disregard every post I have written, but its not quite true; you should still use at least a planner and a to-do list maker. One way is the journal I suggested, another is the Google Calendar. One I have picked up on from a friend (who is also a follower!) is called any.do and I absolutely love it. Right now they have two linked apps; any.do and any.do cal. The first one is a task application that allows you to separate your things-to-do into custom categories, i.e. school, groceries, cleaning, etc. What I like is you can have it set an alarm off in the morning so you can plan your day. It will show you all of your tasks, and let you choose whether you would like to do them today, later (you get options for tomorrow, two days, next week, or someday), if they are already done and you forgot to check it off, or if you would like to delete it. If you choose to do it today, it will give you time options for an alarm, or you can opt out. The second app, cal, is well, a calendar. It can sync to your Google calendar and adds in your tasks from any.do. It has beautiful pictures for the background, which you can customize for your style, choosing between art, fashion, food, landscape, animals, design, cars, architecture, and illustration, or any combination. Everyday has a different picture. You can sync facebook birthdays (or not, because I find those notifications quite annoying), easily change which calendars are visible, even change what day you want your week to start (between Saturday, Sunday, and Monday). And the best part about both of these apps is just how pretty they are.

 

And if you are an Android user, they have beautiful widgets for your home screen that make it easy to add or check off tasks, or add dates into your calendar.

So now, I personally use a combination of my oh-so-loved Original Student Planner, my Google Calendar, and any.do. I still use the journal, but only to record things that couldn’t go into any of these, for instance how I plan to organize my expanding file folder (I don’t know the official name for these...). So anyways…

Here are my tips to starting off right:

Now I know when I started this blog I said I will never say you need to buy things to get organized, however there are some things I am using that you might not have. You don’t need to buy them, but they have made it easier for me. It just means you’ll have to get creative in maneuvering around these items (and you can always send me a quick message asking for advice). Some supplies I am using (pictures below):

  1. The Original Student Planner, or planner of choice
  2. An expanding file folder (I got one at staples with a really cute pattern for around $10)
  3. Different colored pens, at least as many colors as classes you have (I got a pack of Inkjoy pens from Office Depot for around $6 with doubles of every color)
  4. Binder clips (right now Michael’s has a Betsey Johnson collection in their impulse section. The binder clips were $2-$3, plus a 40% off coupon, so less than $2)
  5. A pen pouch (also Michael’s impulse, $1.20 with coupon)
  6. Different colored markers or highlighters (I am using prismacolor, mostly because I like the ink in them and I want to expand my collection of them, but I don’t recommend it since they are expensive, regularly priced at $5.99 a piece. Just get a pack of highlighters with a bunch of different colors, or even regular markers.)
  7. Pretty cardstock, or really any scrap piece of paper.

It sounds like a lot, but really its not when its broken down. I use the expanding folder as a binder, and I only need one of them. Everyone needs pens, and this is probably the least important part of the list, however if you elect for single colored pens do not worry about different colored highlighters. 

The main thing to remember is this is my way. Nothing says you have to do this identically. I will not call you out for using a binder, or six binders, or paper clips instead of binder clips, or pencil versus pen. I am sharing what I found easiest for me to get organized.

Here are my items:

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There are more pen color options, I’m just to lazy busy to grab them.

Now lets get down to how I use these items.

The first week of classes is over, at least for me (if not you get to start the same way I did! Slowly over the course of the week until its finally done), and that means you have been to all your classes and received all of your syllabi (or syllabuses, but that sounds silly to me). So pull all those bad boys out and grab your pens and planner. Designate a color to each class. This is why I say have multiple colors. One other option is to just get different colored highlighters and highlighting the different courses, but that seems like more work to me. If you are using The Original Student Planner, open to the time table page and fill in your schedule (If you are not using this planner, and your planner doesn’t have a time table section and course information, scroll down for a little ways until I say stop). I use the specific colors for each block, like so;

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See? You can obviously read my schedule; there is no denying that I have Humanities Monday and Wednesday at 8:30-9:45 (wasn’t my choice of time), Statistics Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 1 pm, and Art History Fridays 10-12:45. The only thing not on here is my online science class, but it has no designated time. However, you could always add a specific time, if you have an online class, to only work on that class. I am just not that good. Next on the agenda (haha, get it? because we are working on our planners!), flip to the course description part of your planner, if it has one. In mine its right after the time tables. It has spots to put your course number, building location and room, teacher’s information, and important assignments. Go ahead and fill it out. I never really used the information last semester, but its better to have it handy than not.

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Yes, I know my handwriting is terrible, don’t remind me.

This part is pretty straight forward, and should only take a minute or two. If you are good about it, you can record your grades throughout the semester and never have a bad GPA sneak up on you. Finish up with this quickly and move on to the next part.

Now to the weekly portion. If you are aimlessly scrolling because you didn’t have those two sections, STOP!!!

I skip over the monthly calendars because their boxes are small and therefor bore me. This is where you’ll want your different colored pens or markers or whatever you plan on using to distinguish (if you elected for the monotone planner for expense, or laziness, you will just have to write the course name or some identifying mark next to your assignments). Pull out one syllabus at a time and start transferring it’s calendar into your own. If your syllabi don’t have calendars, something is seriously wrong with your teachers, however a quick remedy is emailing your professors to see if they can give you a schedule.

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I took different approaches for each course on inputting the information. For my online course I wrote the learning outcomes for the weeks in the “to do this week” portion of my planner, and then filled in the weekly assignment due dates in. For a class that only gives a general topic for the week, I also write it in “to do this week” and write the assignments as normal. Classes that give a daily break down, assignments as normal and the daily topics in the “general study” portion of each day.

Things that are done get crossed out, things that aren’t get transferred daily.

You want to put in as much as you can now, because in a month you will not feel inclined to input this information. Everyone knows that you are more motivated to get things done at the beginning of the semester than you are at the end. Prepare yourself now for when exams stress you out. I filled in everything on the syllabi plus more, i.e. vacation days and unwritten deadlines.

Try and review everything once a week, and quickly move things over during the week. If every Sunday you went over last week’s assignments and compared to the coming week’s, you can better prepare yourself.

 

 

Now let’s move on to the file folder!

Right up there is a picture of my pretty file folder. 

Right below is a picture of the inside.

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How I separated mine out was Syllabi, then General, then a pocket for each of my classes, then a separate Test pocket (partially because they are more important, partially because I hate leaving empty pockets)

In the General I put important papers from school related things, like parking permit form. Everything is pretty self explanatory. This is where the binder clips come in. The whole reason I switched to this system from binders is because i realized professors hate hole punching, apparently. Which I understand, because I hate hole punching. Now I don’t have to worry about that! I even switched to white legal pads, and I like them better so far, plus they are cheaper. Though now when I do get something hole punched I get frustrated. Anyways, I use the binder clips to separate the sub-sections of each pocket. So in any given pocket, excluding syllabi and general, there will individual clips for notes, homework, quizzes, etc. In tests each subject will be clipped.

The markers should be of coordinating colors, i.e if you art history class is written in red in your planner, have a red marker. I use them to highlight my notes so everything is color coded. It makes it easier on my mind.

The pen bag is just to hold all your pens and markers. Plus I wanted to show everyone that I found a pen bag that matches my glasses.

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And this is how I am starting my semester off on a good foot. This was very wordy, but I feel its worthy information.

Next week I am hoping to have an update on keeping to this schedule, and a post on cleaning, or studying!

Just remember, lazy doesn’t always mean unorganized!

How to Fit Cleaning into Your Everyday Life and Barely Notice: Day One

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So, I am starting a four day journey into cleaning my room and my car. Mostly because my boyfriend, Zack, is coming over Friday to have a post-Thanksgiving Thanksgiving dinner. We both work Thursday, but we still wanted the turkey and all the fixin’s. I took this as an opportunity to write my tips on how to clean, and hopefully I will keep it up myself!

So, this is the current state of my room:ImageImageImageImage

Seriously, its disgusting. And aside from cleaning for my boyfriend, I want to clean for myself. I do not want to live like this anymore. I have always considered my habits creative and free-spirited, like how they say people who are right-brain thinkers don’t follow linear patterns in life and how they can have a different version of clean. But I think this goes a little beyond that. 

The whole idea behind this blog was to redefine my habits of cleaning and organization, and do it with all the peer-pressure of followers and the hope I could help someone else just like me.

So, here it is, day one of my four day journey to a permanently clean room:

Day One:

Remember that journal I told you to get/ make out of napkins? Well, you are going to need it. Look around your room and write down everything you see wrong. My list went a little something like this:

  • soda cans
  • plastic bags
  • felt scraps
  • yarn
  • dirty clothes
  • clean clothes
  • dirty sheets
  • books
  • dishes
  • makeup
  • nail polish
  • soda boxes
  • trash bag
  • miscellaneous trash

Write them all down in your journal. Then write out how to solve the problems, combining items as you go:

  • Throw away all trash(soda cans, felt scraps, miscellaneous) 
  • Collect and bag all plastic bags (I save mine for general purposes, do whatever you want with yours)
  • Re-wind yarn and find home for them (the amount of tangled yarn I have is ridiculous)
  • Fold clean clothes
  • Use now empty laundry basket and fill with dirty clothes
  • Wash sheets
  • Find home for books
  • Wash dishes
  • Organize make-up drawer
  • Put away nail polish
  • Find home for soda boxes; throw out if empty
  • Throw out full trash bags

Before you start cleaning, take a couple pictures of your room just like I did. That way when you get to the end of the day or the end of the week, you can look back and see how far you have come! Punishing yourself is never the answer, instead remind yourself how bad it once was and how much better it will be.

You do not have to complete this is one day. I am not going to even attempt doing it in one day. What I do is instead of completing one task at a time, I work on a little of each every day.

So today, when I woke up, I washed all of my make-up brushes after using them and put them away. I washed one plate, and threw away a coffee cup. Then I took one of the two big trash bags down to the dumpster, leaving the other one because its not quite full. When I got back from class, I folded a few clean clothes and put away my nail polish box. I folded a few clean clothes. I picked up felt scraps, threw a bunch of plastic bags into a bigger plastic bag, and organized a little. Now, at the end of the night, this is what my room looks like:

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There, see? What a little work wont do. And the first week is the most work. Once you have your room clean, its much easier to keep it clean. But more information on that later.

So this is the end of Day One. Tomorrow will be on how to clean your car and keep it clean for the people who are too busy to stop and spend an hour or two on cleaning it out. Or too lazy.

Just remember, this is all about you, and finding your perfect path.

 

The Tumultuous and Long Overdue Beginning

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“He who does not get fun and enjoyment out of every day… needs to reorganize his life.” 
― George M. Adams

 

Hello World. My name is Megan, and I am a mess. Literally. My day starts with tripping over boxes and clothes on the floor and continues into pushing trash out of my feet’s way in my car. I have a problem. I am behind on homework, studying, and my knitting. Which, speaking of knitting I have lost my expensive set of knitting needles and have accidentally stabbed myself in the toe with a sewing needle that was on the floor. I repeat: I am a MESS. So that is why I am starting this blog. My hope is to use this as an outlet to organize my life and my time to make room for myself, and still get everything done. 

This started with a realization in my life that I need to turn things around, and a trip to Barnes & Noble. I went in search of books on organization and time management. Lo and Behold, there were none! Well, there were none that worked for what I needed. Every book I picked up talked about motherly things, like organizing your life around your kids schedule, and how to properly schedule meetings, and required all sorts of fancy things that I needed to buy (hello!! I am a broke, 19 year old college student! I can’t afford a shopping spree at Ikea!). This got me mad. Like, really mad. What I like to call mach ten Megan. And it got me determined. I would figure this out on my own, and hopefully in the end be able to help other broke 19 year old college students.

My decidedly first step in this journey is the necessary materials. The things I will be using are:

  • My Planner (The absolute best planner, The Original Student Calendar)
  • A journal (I work at Michael’s Arts & Crafts and every year around Christmas time we get super cute ones in for really cheap)

That’s it. You really do not even need these. I also use my Google Calendar, so you don’t need the planner, and I personally don’t care if your journal is twelve napkins stapled together. You just need something you can keep track of your goals and accomplishments in.

My next step was to plug everything into the calendar. I started with my Google calendar because I could easily do repeat events. For instance, I only had to type in Astronomy Fridays 2:30 to 5:15 once. You can also edit those perpetual events for one of the days. So even though I have my work shift on Sundays set for 7am to 11am, my shift is 6am to 2pm this week, and I can edit just this Sunday

Plug everything into your Google Calendar. Seriously, everything. From work to school to parties to sleep, if it will help you. You don’t have to do it in one sitting. And I always include addresses in there. There is a handy little spot to put it, and because it is linked with my phone it will remind me beforehand and tell me how long it will take to get there with traffic (isn’t technology awesome??). Now I do not personally plug in my sleep schedule because that is not something I can plan, but if it helps, do it! Constantly update this calendar, because changing or adding one little thing a day will help you with staying ahead, not falling behind.

Next, work on your paper planner, if you decided to have one.Image

This is mine. I bought it at Barnes & Noble at the beginning of the semester (the last time I decided to be organized) and I love it. It has a time table to write out your semester schedule, a place to keep track of professor’s names, phone numbers, office hours, and when your exams will be. Then it has the normal monthly calendars. It has everything for up to three semesters, Fall, Spring, and Summer. The actual planner part is sectioned into three categories for each day: Appointments & Assignments, General Study, The Rest of Your Life. 

Typically I use Appointments & Assignments for, well, appointments and assignments. When a paper is due, when a test is, etc.

Then for General study I put upcoming things, like study for Thursday’s Government Test, or Math homework due Wednesday.

In The Rest of Your Life is everything else. Work shifts, parties, craft things to work on, books to read, anything you want to remember to do.

You want to again, fill EVERYTHING in. This doesn’t need to be as detailed as Google. Well, okay. Choose which you will use more; Google vs. Paper. If you choose Google, make that one pristine and only put the bare minimum in the paper. If you choose paper, flip that statement. Or do both perfectly, more power to you! (but ain’t nobody got time for that).

Spend some real time on making your schedule comprehensive to yourself. Nobody else matters. Again, you do not have to do this all at once. Take a week to work on it, a month, I don’t care. You want it to be perfect, not rushed.

Next is the journal. This is not a diary, but a record of everything. I am going to try and write in it once a day, or at least once a week.

ImageThis is mine. I spent maybe $4. Its super cute because I love cartoony owls (Though cartoony foxes are better.)

There are only three things I have come up so far to write in it weekly.

  • Goals
  • What I have accomplished
  • Daily schedule

Now, I did say this is not a diary, but you could use it as that too. Just make sure you clearly remember these two topics. 

The first one, goals, is a running tally of what you want to accomplish. It does not mean what you want to accomplish that week. You can do one of those two, but this is the important one. That way at the beginning of the week when you write your next one you can look back and see what you accomplished, and what you need to carry to the next week. And it includes long and short term goals. Want to remember to do laundry? Put it on there. Want to catch up on math homework? Put it on there. Want to re-watch all seven season of the new Doctor Who? Put in on there. Try not to leave anything out except for the really quick tasks, like “throw this cup in my hand away.” Throw that cup away and focus on more important things.

At the end of the week, make your list of accomplishments. Write out all the things you got done on your list, and add in the ones you accomplished that weren’t on there. If you found out your grade went from a B to an A, out it there. This is not only a tally, but when you are feeling like you haven’t done anything right, look back on it and remember you have. 

A big thing is to date everything. Everything page you write on. It will keep you on track and organized (that’s the whole point, right?). 

The final is to make a daily schedule. The reason I do not put this in the planner is because I do a time table for it, which does not fit in well with the format. The reason I don’t do it in my Google Calendar is because it is volatile, and I find Google calendar is better for repeating events and pre-scheduled things.

Basically how I make my daily schedule is I write out what I have already planned that day, i.e classes and work. Then I plan what my time left is for studying, eating, cleaning, and hobbies. One thing to remember is that we as humans only have about 45 minutes of focus, after that we get distracted. I don’t trust myself to even that so I do half-hour intervals.

This is an example of my list for today:

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Very simple, it keeps me on track though. It is Saturday, so no school, and I managed to get this day off work, though I don’t usually. So I have all day to work on the three main things I have to work on; studying, making about a hundred hand-sewn fox clips, and finishing this blog post. Then i divvy it up in half hour segments, then give myself an hour for cleaning and eating. If a half hour is too much, do fifteen minutes, or if you can handle more do forty five minutes to an hour.

I don’t always follow this down to the minute, and there are things like going to the bathroom, but this is a basic schedule. make it as simple or complex as you like!

 

This is my Part 1 to scheduling. I say part 1 because I will probably come back with more information as I get farther along in this journey into organizing my life.

Just remember, this is all about you, and finding your perfect path.