Yeah but The point of the video was how to still have stuff to plan when you don’t have anything to plan and if that’s the case you wouldn’t have these events to take photos of. I don’t have anyone to take photos or memories of.
No kids to plan stuff to do... no , finances are not a given😥 No we don’t ALL have those bills. Bad assumption. Omg goals too... no we don’t ALL have those goals. No profession, no marriage. Please stop assuming and claiming you know we ALL...😥
I am retired and live alone with no kids (and at the time of writing we are in lockdown) so can relate to the points you mentioned, but it's about the thought process involved rather than specifics and hopefully it may lead you to come up with some ideas of your own - home maintenance, cleaning, gardening, sleep patterns, mood, nutrition, hydration, those tasks off your to-do list, hobby-related projects, research... Even without the people-related events you mentioned there are many things you can track or schedule, and even the smallest routine helps.
@@JT1358 That wasn’t the point of my comment. It was the fact that she was saying that things were obvious or a given or that definitely people have these things when she doesn’t know everyone’s situation and that isn’t true. And being retired doesn’t mean you can relate. I don’t have these things because it’s not about being retired it’s about I just lost everyone from death. And I don’t have the things you said to keep checking - no household maintenance, no finances, nowhere to garden, lost my physical ability for my hobby You don’t know my situation. And again the point was the assumption that everyone has something to plan and everyone has finances and everyone has home maintenance that isn’t true and you don’t know that for sure. And I don’t need a planner to keep track of been hydrated - I drink plenty of water without writing it in a book and I don’t need a planner to keep track of my mode which is the same every day after just losing everyone.
@@JT1358 I don’t have the ability to do projects And absolutely no need to track sleep patterns. I sleep fine. And I can’t clean And that’s assuming I have a house. Again it’s just a constant assumption you and her and all these other planner people that everyone has these basic things in their life. Not everyone has a House to clean or money to budget or yard to garden
Great ideas! I use both an a5 Filofax and an a6 Gillis so this was an amazing help for my planning group!
Thank you, Rebeca! A lot of great ideas I had not thought of before. Great video!
Thank you for watching! I am so happy that it was helpful
I have alot going on but you still gave me great ideas on how to organize and track other things that are important to me! 😊
So many great ideas! Can you share where you purchased the 4 pocket plastic holder for your A6?
Hi Donna! Thank you for watching. The card dashboard is from Catspresso 🤍
catspresso.com/
@@EatPrayPlan Thanks so much. I was having trouble finding some.
What's the different between personal size and the A6 size.!
Hi! Personal is rectangle, A6 is square.
@@EatPrayPlan thank you so much..from Rana plans😘😘😘😘😘
Great video Rebeca! Thanks again for doing this collab with me🥰
Thank you so much! It’s always fun to collab with you 😘
Great video. Blessings.
I thoroughly enjoy all of your videos! Thumbs up :-)
The watercolor dashboards behind your plastic dividers are SO pretty! Did you make those yourself or buy them? =)
I'm a B6 girl 😊
Yeah but The point of the video was how to still have stuff to plan when you don’t have anything to plan and if that’s the case you wouldn’t have these events to take photos of. I don’t have anyone to take photos or memories of.
No kids to plan stuff to do... no , finances are not a given😥 No we don’t ALL have those bills. Bad assumption. Omg goals too... no we don’t ALL have those goals. No profession, no marriage. Please stop assuming and claiming you know we ALL...😥
I am retired and live alone with no kids (and at the time of writing we are in lockdown) so can relate to the points you mentioned, but it's about the thought process involved rather than specifics and hopefully it may lead you to come up with some ideas of your own - home maintenance, cleaning, gardening, sleep patterns, mood, nutrition, hydration, those tasks off your to-do list, hobby-related projects, research... Even without the people-related events you mentioned there are many things you can track or schedule, and even the smallest routine helps.
@@JT1358 That wasn’t the point of my comment. It was the fact that she was saying that things were obvious or a given or that definitely people have these things when she doesn’t know everyone’s situation and that isn’t true. And being retired doesn’t mean you can relate. I don’t have these things because it’s not about being retired it’s about I just lost everyone from death. And I don’t have the things you said to keep checking - no household maintenance, no finances, nowhere to garden, lost my physical ability for my hobby You don’t know my situation. And again the point was the assumption that everyone has something to plan and everyone has finances and everyone has home maintenance that isn’t true and you don’t know that for sure. And I don’t need a planner to keep track of been hydrated - I drink plenty of water without writing it in a book and I don’t need a planner to keep track of my mode which is the same every day after just losing everyone.
@@JT1358 and I don’t have a to do list because I have absolutely nothing to do. People need to stop assuming other peoples situations.
@@JT1358 I don’t have the ability to do projects And absolutely no need to track sleep patterns. I sleep fine. And I can’t clean And that’s assuming I have a house. Again it’s just a constant assumption you and her and all these other planner people that everyone has these basic things in their life. Not everyone has a House to clean or money to budget or yard to garden
While I empathize with what you’re going through, I also realize everything isn’t for everyone. This may not be the channel for you.