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I suffered major planner failure yesterday

I don’t often suffer planner fail, but when I do it tends to be epic.

Below is what a busy week looks like. Each booking is in a different place (sometimes entailing 40 minutes of travelling time each way between clients) and sometimes venues change. I have to leave time to get through security checks and check equipment etc. I also have waiting lists for if I have cancellations and there are rules regarding the time of the cancellation for invoicing purposes. There is no way I could keep this in my head. I have to write it all down and make sure to update it fastidiously and check it regularly.

Losing my planner would be a disaster because I would not have a clue where to be or what to do.

I did have a disaster a few years ago when I still used an A5 and my back was really sore from the weight I carry around each day. I took  two months’ worth of the calendar out of my Filofax A5 Siena, stapled the pages together, left the binder at home, and just carried the pages in my bag. Until I accidentally picked those precious calendar pages up with the top secret classified documents I had to hand back for shredding. Bye bye schedule. That day I changed to personal size….it took me months to work out my schedule again and I had to phone every single one of my clients to get all my bookings back.

So, I know I need my calendar. I know I need to refer to it. But when I am busy and stressed and time is short, I always somehow imagine that I remember everything. Why I do this I don’t know because bitter experience shows that I am wrong wrong wrong and that the more busy I am the more I need to make time to look at my planner.

So yesterday my day (the one marked 27) looked like this

I had a fail the day before actually for the same reason. My 1pm to 3pm client had changed his booking to 3pm to 5pm via phone while I had been running between meetings and I had not written the changes. So naturally I arrived two hours early….

For someone who works like I do, being able to rely on everything I write down being correct, is absolutely vital. My planner is my extra brain. I cannot keep all that information inside my head. So I have to write things down and more importantly, I have to make sure to REFER to them.

So in this case the planner failed because I failed to use my planner. The more busy I am the more I need to use my planner but the more busy I am the more some part of me thinks I am too busy to use my planner. It does not happen often – about twice a year. Because I am very seldom late and always start and finish on time, people are very understanding about my rare fails. I am not even too hard on myself because I do pretty well most of the time in a demanding job.

Just as a frame of reference, before I did this job, I worked in a small university town in South Africa for the best part of 19 years, teaching journalism. There was a rush-minute every day at 12.45 when everyone drove home for lunch! I still used Filofax then though and so did my boss!

Luckily, because my planner is just for scheduling and to dos, I don’t suffer from the other type of planner fail which must be even more difficult – trying to be organised but stuck on preparing to be organised. Those fails tend to be when people buy a planner, spent ages creating or buying inserts, watching planner setup videos, writing out (and sometimes decorating) their increasingly complex layouts and plans for how to be organised. But then putting those plans into action are more daunting than actually planning for them and it fails.  That must be more of an emotional failure because you had so much hope that it would change your life. Because (as with me), *I* am the one that has to be active in seeing that my planner works. It won’t do it FOR me.

UPDATE: I was asked both in the comments and on Facebook about the rest of my inserts.

 

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