6099 comments
2357 subscribers
6263 on Twitter
Subscribe! Feed reader E-mail

Looking back and looking forward

Have you ever felt unsure about whether you’re moving forward or where the time went? A friend called me up and asked for help on being able to see the progress in her life. I walked her through the process of doing a weekly review using a Google Docs document.

A weekly review is really simple. Write down the dates you’re talking about, and then write down what you did. Look at your calendar, e-mail, and to-do list for hints. Don’t worry about pinning things down to a specific day; just write down what you remember. Set yourself a reminder to do this again next week – it might be a calendar appointment, it might be an item on your to-do list. Lather, rinse, repeat.

When she got to the end of the things she remembered about last week, I asked her some questions about relationships and life, and we turned up quite a few more things to celebrate.

She was surprised by how long the list was. People do a lot, but it’s hard to remember what you’ve done. You make progress an inch at a time, and you don’t see the miles.

I can remember about a week back, and that only with the help of my notes. Any further back, and I know I’ll be missing important things. I write so that I can remember. Daily blog posts roll up into weekly reviews, which roll up into monthly and yearly reviews. I can tell you where the last ten years went: where I’ve gone forward, and where I’ve lost something along the way.

It’s good to celebrate the little wins, though, and that’s part of why a weekly review is so useful. We forget where life goes.

It’s also good to see the gaps, to come a little closer to what you really want. Writing down your ideas for the next period keeps you from forgetting. You can move away from the plan, especially if other opportunities come up, but the plan is a useful default.

Reviews are so useful that I do several yearly reviews, even though that can be a little confusing. The New Year holiday is a natural time to do an annual review, one synchronized with other people. My birthday is another review point. It’s useful to summarize life as a 28-year-old or 29-year-old. It helps people relate across the years. My experiment anniversary is February and my fiscal year ends in September; both are occasions for a mini-review. So I’m regularly looking at a sliding window of time, figuring out how far I’ve come and what I want to do with the next year. Sometimes this confuses me, but still, it’s handy to periodically check. (See my previous reviews.)

I also regularly look forward. When I analyzed the phrases I used on my blog in 2012, “I want to” and “so that I” were my top two phrases. I write about what I want to do. I mindmap and draw my ideas. This looking-ahead is part of my regular weekly, monthly, and yearly reviews. Thinking about the future pulls me forward so that I don’t get stuck in the past. It makes the present more vivid, more real.

January is named for the Roman god Janus, the two-faced god of beginnings and transitions (or at least that’s what Wikipedia says he is). He looks towards the past and the future, and so do we.

See also:

Short URL: http://sachachua.com/blog/p/24323

On This Day...

  • 2012: Weekly review: Week ending December 30, 2011 — Lots of progress on Quantified Awesome thanks to last week’s long weekend. Looking forward to building more this long weekend. [...]
  • 2011: Weekly review: Week ending December 31, 2010 — From last week’s plans Work [X] Work on Project M: Make sure users have permissions to do things [...]
  • 2010: On the practice of a weekly review — A weekly review is an excellent idea. Here are some of the reasons why I do it: Track and celebrate accomplishments. [...]
  • 2009: Homebody — Fun with friends is fine and dandy; chefs and waiters, pretty handy; But it’s clear in every case that home remains [...]
  • 2009: Happiness and cats — Tania Samsonova sent me a link to this geeky-and-oh-so-true comic: Schrödinger’s (emotional) Miscalculation – Part 3. Tania, you rock! =D
  • 2008: Working on section on Org and projects — Just to say that I’m alive and writing. I’m at 1400 words or so for the section on Org and [...]
  • 2007: Big, hairy, audacious goal — 2My Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal for the next eight months is to help huge companies imagine how they can help people [...]
  • 2007: My books are balanced — I have to confess a certain delight in knowing that my books are balanced and that I have a full year [...]
  • 2007: Making things happen — My dad was telling all sorts of crazy stories at the breakfast table earlier. It’s a good thing my mom reminded [...]
  • 2007: Yay me! — I gave up watching New Year fireworks for the thrill of actually keeping a not-quite-New-Year goal of waking up before 7:30 [...]
  • 2004: On losing my data — Insightful post, then X-Windows died horribly. Agh! No auto-save! Yes, yes, I know, it doesn’t have season words or the wordplay I so [...]
  • 2004: Paper: Problem-based learning for foundation computer science courses — http://www.cs.usyd.edu.au/~judy/PBL/tr_cse_pbl99.pdf The foundation courses in computer science pose particular challenges for teacher and learner alike. This paper describes some of these challenges [...]
  • 2004: Considering part-time — Blast. My really long blog post disappeared after stuff crashed. In brief: I’m thinking of teaching part-time instead of full-time. I want [...]
  • 2004: Ackpth, lost mail — <sigh> Whoops.
  • 2004: Consolidating archives — tla make-archive -l sacha@free.net.ph--main ~/notebook/arch tla my-default-archive sacha@free.net.ph--main tla archive-setup emacs-wiki--sacha--1.0 tla tag arch@repose.cx--03/emacs-wiki--dev--1.0 emacs-wiki--sacha--1.0 tla cacherev emacs-wiki--sacha--1.0 tla get emacs-wiki--sacha--1.0 emacs-wiki
  • 2004: LDAP admin — -----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (GNU/Linux) hQEOAyM0ahSC/SeUEAQAiUiEncXWQems/3SY+A5JlHOP0F8sHJk4/S1lhSKZKsWD xpjIOFbxpn8rrtprOp9mnc9QMBGzRnnffinx9rbwz4nd0ryxHhuUigZbDDeItoON lMM5GupfkQuP/lJt+BtUxZsze5yj2KcXMDPPQawaM/WVqo01yUDDarVoauO6wtYD /jbZJv24fM4lbDKfzfMEEsw9Ik1wdt/ou5bCfK9OOfLCofV5zV0AuMl0HCpqEN7P 6E2wJRSzSRliG8DXCFcMsjbhWjIzr37x3smsTkHRkY8MPIsT4YGUIxNNlgj5HMMe 74Vvb5keEsM03AD/H9rKWEE2it76aUMmyQLTb7pgvzC50j0BMVBA/8g9CAkBHNie sBC1pYJENkEycwXSHaOv+Z4CbJ9+PNbabI6oUQJ0s21OdsxsEOisPmpxgvbP9Tjx =6lI2 -----END PGP MESSAGE-----
  • 2004: Good night in Dutch — welterusten, or just trusten for short.
  • 2004: Reaction to OnLove — I was recently considering the idea of having a “girlfriend” purely for emotional reasons. i prefer to name it “emotional buffer”. [...]
  • 2004: File-local variables in vim — :help modeline
  • 2004: On days — Only a few hours ago did fireworks light up the sky to celebrate the beginning of a new year, yet now [...]
  • 2004: SIGCSE: The first stop for computer science education research — http://www.acm.org/sigcse/ SIGCSE is the special interest group for computer science education in the Association for Computing Machinery. It regularly organizes conferences and the [...]
  • 2004: Resolutions for 2004 — Speak slower and lower. Check requirements within 3 days. Log all of my expenses in plain text in Emacs so that I [...]
  • 2004: Old computer — I’m having problems with the ADMTek Centaur-P. It’s a tulip card, but for some reason it does not want to be [...]

Get the highlights as a PDF!

Stories from my Twenties: Highlights from a Decade of Blogging

Free sample!