A little simplistic sometimes, but I like it nevertheless. It helps me get through exam season.
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My posts keep messing up the Blog Squad aggregate page. Sorry. Hopefully, this will only go through once, because more than that would be too many hearts even for me.
Highlights of the past week include:
♥ Watching Cavalia with my fellow staff members and having a delicious Caribbean dinner with them afterwards.
♥ Improving from a consistent 12th-place player in Mario Kart for the Wii to coming in 2nd (once)!
♥ The excellent Sonic Boom A Cappella spring concert!
♥ Successfully making cheddar, bacon and green onion muffins for a friend’s birthday (which were a lot more delicious than I expected!).
♥ My brother. I love my brother. Always. Sometimes for no specific reason at all, although this week it’s because he made me French onion soup, nom nom nom.
♥ Working madly with friends to put together what is frankly going to be an awesome skit at the Musqueam potluck tonight. In hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, no less! I love the First Nations Language program.
♥ Rereading Mary Oliver’s Dream Work and feeling thankful that my obsessive analysis of one person’s poetry isn’t killing my ability to love other poems.
♥ The view of the ocean from my room on sunny days when it glitters at me.
♥ Cherry blossoms and pictures like these:

(If anyone knows where this picture is from, please let me know so I can credit it properly.)
The Vancouver Mokuyokai Society is hosting its 27th annual ohanami (cherry blossom viewing) in Nitobe Memorial Garden this Saturday. Come by and take a look — entrance to Nitobe is free for UBC students!
Mokuyokai Society’s 27th Annual Ohanami
Saturday 9 April 2011, 12:00 noon to 7:00 pm
Nitobe Memorial Garden and Asian Centre
Posted in Things I Love Thursday
Usually, I’m the type of person who can remember all the tasks she has to do by when without having to write them down. I have a list of homework and when they are due in my weekly planner which I refer to once in a while, just in case, but it’s usually not necessary.
Lately, however, this ever-growing to do list has got to the point where I can’t process it all anymore, and I’ve started to plan my weeks out using a weekly planner template taken from The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Sean Covey, and put together by Ammon, the owner of the blog I originally found the PDF on.
Those of you who’ve read The 7 Habits will be familiar with this layout, but in case you aren’t, here is how I use it:
1. Identify your roles in life
Typical roles include one’s role as a spouse, parent, student, worker, etc. My roles are those of a daughter, sister, friend, student, employee, and Speakeasy team leader. Depending on the week, I fill out these roles a little differently: this week, for example, each of my classes gets its own arrow, I am a team leader, and I have an arrow for myself.
I like to colour code each of my roles to make it easier to see across the page, as well.
2. Identify the weekly goals you want to achieve for each role
Break down what you want to achieve in each aspect or role of your life. For example, this week my chart looks like this:
Myself: piano, art, blog, write, EndNotes conference (?)
CRWR: get notes for missed classes, study for quiz
Thesis: reread forage, analyse 1-2 poems, update supervisor, email second reader
FNLG: write script, translate script, memorise
FNSP: readings, journal entry, research paper sources
TL: get materials for year-end event, do budget before April 5
When I’m done with my list, I like to number each of them off to make it easier for the next step.
3. Fill out each of these goals across the week for when you want to do them
Decide when you need to do each of these goals. I like to put these in both ‘Today’s Priorities’ and at the exact time I want to do them, if possible, e.g. my priority tomorrow is to complete my journal entry for my FNSP class and I want to do that at 4 pm, after I finish work and pick up some materials for the year-end event.
I also fill out other things across my ‘Appointments/Commitments’ timetable that aren’t necessarily in my goals list in terms of my different roles, but which I need or want to do for one reason or another, such as laundry, groceries, cleaning the bathroom, etc.
The evening/notes section is usually full of reminders to myself of things I need to do at some point, e.g. pick up newspaper to clean bathroom mirror.
What’s this ‘Sharpen the Saw’ business?
Sharpen the Saw is a reference to Habit 7 of The 7 Habits (which I do recommend reading for its many useful and important ideas, not least on time management and interpersonal communication), which is about taking the time to maintain one’s physical, mental, spiritual and social/emotional well-being in order to be at your best.
To be honest, I’m not filling this section out at all at the moment. A need to engage in more self-care? Probably, but I am also at my limit this week in terms of what I can do for myself while completing everything else I have to do… so while it’s not ideal, self-care is taking a bit of a backseat again this week. But it’s okay, I tell myself, just one more week of pulling through and I’ll be able to breathe a little more next Sunday.
Just a little more.
In terms of how well this works for me
I’ll be honest, I didn’t finish everything I wrote down for last week, and there were days when I didn’t do what I needed to do and had to catch up other days in other ways (read: less sleep). But I did manage to complete three quarters of what I originally set out, which is more than I would probably have achieved had I not written it all out. So that’s something.
My biggest problem with this method is that I end up feeling very stressed at the beginning of each week as I look in despair at the schedule I’ve made for myself and calming down as I slog through the days — which may not be so much an issue with time management as it is with my stress management.
Regardless, I’d like to hear how other people manage their time, should there be something better suited to me floating around out there.
And now I am off to lose more sleep. It is sad when you can’t even catch up on sleep over the weekend.
On an unrelated note, I’m reading Mary Oliver’s ‘Wild Geese’ over and over again. It’s my mental breathing space.
Posted in Academic, Careers / Work, Involvement / Leadership
Taking a quick break from slogging through my checklist of to-do this week to point out that the UBC Student Services homepage has been updated with new material. I’m particularly proud of these as I spent a lot of time looking for what I hope are the most relevant links and resources for students at this time of year — let me know if they are! If you have any suggestions for some useful webpages (under the Student Services umbrella) you’d like to see for the May 1st update, leave a comment here as well.
An interesting event coming up this week (which I’m sadly not able to go): Stress-Less for Exam Success is offering free tai chi, meditation, yoga, and a goal-setting for exams workshop.
Stress-Less for Exam Success (Facebook event details)
Wednesday 6 April, 12 noon–3pm
Chapman Learning Commons, Irving K Barber Learning Centre
Official registration link
One evening last week, I was getting off at the UBC bus loop and making my way back to residence. Looking about me at all the people waiting in line, each person with a destination in mind, I felt intensely grateful to have a place I can call my home and shelter to head towards.
It’s good to have all my basic needs fulfilled and be able to have extra love for things like:
♥ My new sketchbook from Michaels. I’ve started drawing again for the first time in years and am feeling better for it.
♥ Catching up with friends during Earth Hour. Catching up, in general.
♥ The smell of warm, clean laundry.
♥ Learning how to email a photo from my iPod. (Yes, I am that technologically non-savvy. I’m also frequently excited about these things.)
♥ Watching WALL-E for class. (When I told my brother this, he said, ‘Is this really worth what your tuition fees?’ Yes. Yes, it totally is.)
♥ Good hair days!
♥ A few years old, but the background song to the ‘Where the Hell Is Matt?’ video always makes me a little homesick:
[youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlfKdbWwruY]
♥ Which is why I’m looking forward to going back to Hong Kong for a month in the summer to visit the family.
Posted in Things I Love Thursday