I'm afraid I'm stealing an idea again, this time from Tim's post about diaries. Thank you, Tim. You thought so that I didn't have to.
I have always been quite specific about my requirement in a diary. A week to view with 4 days on one side of the page, three on the other (every day has the same amount of space) and the last section for notes. Slim enough to go in a handbag but big enough to be able to get several appointments in per day. It's not necessarily that I have lots of appointments every day, but that it's so easy to forget details. My mother, for example, regularly used to say something like "Have I told you what I'm supposed to be doing on Thursday darling, because I've got EL, Norwich, 10.30 and I have no idea what it's about." So whole names and specific places and a reminder of what I had to take or do, which takes a fair bit of space.
This wasn't necessarily that difficult to find, but it wasn't the only requirement. I plan ahead, sometimes by several months. So a diary that started in January and ended in December was useless, I needed overlap. Ideally, a diary should include the whole of December, so that I could do the changeover early, and finish at the end of January or later, because I'd have quite a bit to write in by then. I've got engagements on 19 days in January so far, for example, and 12 in February, and I'm not as busy as people with a proper job. I never managed to find a diary that gave that much scope, though.
It wasn't bad when my mother had an account with Coutts. They had jolly good diaries, and actually she had two accounts so received two diaries and gave the spare to me. It came as close as I ever found to my requirements and was the right size and thickness. But it all became too expensive in the end, it's a sad day when you can't afford your banker any more - and it wasn't the same when they'd been taken over by Nat West, in any case.
So I used to spend ages leafing through all the diaries in the shop and what I bought was always a compromise.
Buying an iPhone and discovering the diary was a happy day. Not only could I set it up to repeat regular events so that I didn't have to write them all in individually, but it all backed up on to the computer so that, in the event that my handbag was stolen (this happened once about 20 years ago: fortunately in October so that my year wasn't a complete bewilderment, only a couple of months of it), I didn't lose a single appointment. To a belt, braces and bailer twine woman like me, this was immensely reassuring.
For the first year, I carried a paper diary too, because I have to acknowledge that it's quicker to jot something down than type it in, on a phone's keypad at any rate. But I couldn't be bothered to fill it in very often, so it was never up to date, and I haven't bought one since. Life is so much simpler now.
I have always been quite specific about my requirement in a diary. A week to view with 4 days on one side of the page, three on the other (every day has the same amount of space) and the last section for notes. Slim enough to go in a handbag but big enough to be able to get several appointments in per day. It's not necessarily that I have lots of appointments every day, but that it's so easy to forget details. My mother, for example, regularly used to say something like "Have I told you what I'm supposed to be doing on Thursday darling, because I've got EL, Norwich, 10.30 and I have no idea what it's about." So whole names and specific places and a reminder of what I had to take or do, which takes a fair bit of space.
This wasn't necessarily that difficult to find, but it wasn't the only requirement. I plan ahead, sometimes by several months. So a diary that started in January and ended in December was useless, I needed overlap. Ideally, a diary should include the whole of December, so that I could do the changeover early, and finish at the end of January or later, because I'd have quite a bit to write in by then. I've got engagements on 19 days in January so far, for example, and 12 in February, and I'm not as busy as people with a proper job. I never managed to find a diary that gave that much scope, though.
It wasn't bad when my mother had an account with Coutts. They had jolly good diaries, and actually she had two accounts so received two diaries and gave the spare to me. It came as close as I ever found to my requirements and was the right size and thickness. But it all became too expensive in the end, it's a sad day when you can't afford your banker any more - and it wasn't the same when they'd been taken over by Nat West, in any case.
So I used to spend ages leafing through all the diaries in the shop and what I bought was always a compromise.
Buying an iPhone and discovering the diary was a happy day. Not only could I set it up to repeat regular events so that I didn't have to write them all in individually, but it all backed up on to the computer so that, in the event that my handbag was stolen (this happened once about 20 years ago: fortunately in October so that my year wasn't a complete bewilderment, only a couple of months of it), I didn't lose a single appointment. To a belt, braces and bailer twine woman like me, this was immensely reassuring.
For the first year, I carried a paper diary too, because I have to acknowledge that it's quicker to jot something down than type it in, on a phone's keypad at any rate. But I couldn't be bothered to fill it in very often, so it was never up to date, and I haven't bought one since. Life is so much simpler now.
6 comments:
Diaries are alright provided you can decipher your own shorthand. A year or so ago I found an entry in my diary that said Col. Blood. This puzzled me for quite a while because the only Colonel Blood I knew of nicked the crown jewels in Charles II's day, and I couldn't think what he was doing in my diary. Fortunately Ann's diary saved the day. Her's said:- Mike to Colchester Hospital - blood test.
I haven't used a date book in ages and I have missed things because of that! I do use my calendar on my MAC, but again, I sometimes forget to look at it. I'm going back to a date book and using a whiteboard in the office to keep track of things! *sigh* xox
Exactly, Mike! i learned the same lesson from my mum's cryptic diary entries.
If you don't like carrying one, Sav, a calendar in the office that everyone can look at is good compromise.
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I love to keep old calendars: I'd hate the electronic sort, too transient.
I don't have a diary - if you haven't got it on you, people can't make you agree to do things you don't want to, on the spur of the moment :)
I used to be hopelessly forgetful about diaries. If it was small enough to go in my handbag it was indecipherably scribbled all over and if it was big enough to write on I forgot to fill it in.
I had an electronic Personal Orgamiser for a year or two but that was a bit clunky. The iPhone is it. The perfect diary, notepad, everything. (Though I do still keep a notepad for shopping lists.)
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