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Productivity Spotlight: A Phone Journal

I used to be the queen of sticky notes. My desk was covered with them. But they weren’t sticky enough for me. They would fall off my monitor and eventually slip behind my desk…along with whatever essential information they contained.

Well, no more of that nonsense. One day I was inspired to buy a small, pocket-sized spiral notebook. I designated the book my “phone journal,” but it soon became much more: the repository of all the scraps of information that I used to lose. I adopted a simple system. I dated each entry. If the notes were related to a phone conversation, I noted who I was talking to. (I went a little crazy taking notes on every conversation, including non-work-related conversations–hey, it helped me listen better. I am not an auditory learner–I can’t be sure I’ll remember something until I write it down.) If the notes pertained to something I was supposed to do, such as information I needed to add to my calendar or address book, or a task I needed to do, I crossed off each task once it was completed. I used a simple diagonal slash across the area of the page on which I had written the task, so that if I needed to later, I could still read what was written there.

A phone journal seems like such a simple innovation, but I have found that this technique is life-changing (at least for those of us with suspected adult ADD!). I’m just not into cute organizational systems. I am not motivated to color code and cross-reference. I have to keep things simple.

A small spiral notebook is about as simple as it gets. One notebook, one pen. It can’t fall behind my desk. It can’t help but be in one easy to follow order: chronological order. All I have to do is write down the same notes that I was already writing down and losing — only now I’m not losing them.

Sometimes, the answer to a productivity problem is not a new gadget or piece of software. Sometimes, the answer is more old-fashioned. No, I can’t sync my notebook to the Cloud. But if I lose it, am I screwed? Not really. Almost all the information in my phone journal is there for one of two purposes: a) to help me pay attention while I’m talking on the phone and b) to help me remember to do something. Once I’m done with the phone call, the paying attention problem is solved. The “to do list” function of the notebook is the only part that I could lose if I lost the book, but that’s usually just a matter of the last two or three entries, and I generally have other reminders coming if I lose my scrap of paper (oh, not to worry–I have other systems in place, set up from the days of relying on not-so-sticky notes!).

I know there are new versions of sticky notes out there now. There are super-sticky notes with glue that just won’t become unsticky and fall down. There are sticky note software programs that allow you to pin sticky notes to your computer desktop, or to actual electronic files, where they won’t fall off. But I am going to stick (no pun intended) with my notebook. It still allows me to experience the satisfaction of writing with pen on paper — and it keeps me organized like no other tool ever has.

But please comment: do sticky notes work for you, or have you replaced them with something entirely different?

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About The Author

I have been working as a freelance writer since 1998, and have been writing and editing professionally full time since 1995. I originally began writing and editing professionally, but only part-time, in 1984 (yes, I started in high school!). I continued writing and editing in college and graduate school, where I also worked as a research assistant from 1990 to 1992. When writing for kids, my philosophy is to treat kids as capable readers who can draw their own conclusions and figure things out, even things that are not explicitly made clear to them. Kids are much smarter than textbook editors or teachers ever give them credit for. Their plastic little brains are forming connections much faster than we adults can even imagine! Trust me, they are smarter than we are. They just don't have as much life experience. Obviously, therefore, I don't believe in dumbing down the curriculum -- I believe in smartening it up. Give kids a wealth of information and context, and stop beating them over the heads with the same sparse details again and again until they are sick to death of school and everything to do with it. Kids hate school because school feels like jail. Give them real information and tools that they can use in real life, and school won't be a jail anymore -- it will be a support and a resource that increases kids' freedom by increasing their ability to handle the real world. Kids universally love it if you give them the chance to actually learn something. Textbook editors and publishers, you would do well to take note of this simple fact!!

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