Look at seven days of notes, spot one pattern, and choose one small thing to try next—no math degree required.
Same day each week helps it stick. Paper or phone—what matters is doing it again next week.
Look for direction, not perfection. If sleep inches up over two weeks and energy rises a point, your evening routine might be helping. If movement stays the same but stress climbs, the fix might be workload—not more workouts.
Tally mood words on paper—which ones repeat? Lots of “calm” on days with sun or friends? Schedule more of that. Lots of “scattered” on meeting-heavy days? Try a five-minute plan before email. One weird day isn’t proof—wait for a second week before you decide.
On your fourth weekly check-in of the month, look at the bigger picture. Sketch weekly averages for sleep and energy—dots on paper are fine. Mark holidays, travel, or crunch time on the same page. Keep your current habit, tweak it, or drop it.
Save old pages by month. Later you might see summer heat hurting sleep or winter dim days affecting mood—without guessing. If a column never gets filled in, delete it on purpose instead of feeling guilty about blanks.
Use your notes to ask better questions—not to label yourself. If sleep stays under six hours and energy stays low for three weeks, talk to someone qualified. Same if stress stays high even after you’ve tried to rest more. Your log starts a conversation; it doesn’t replace one.
Sore muscles after strength work are normal; sharp joint pain is a sign to ease up. If hard weeks wreck your sleep, do less next week. Missing days isn’t failure—doubling workouts out of guilt usually backfires.
More on Staying SafeBefore you close your notebook, write one habit at the top of tomorrow’s page. Questions about what to track? We’re happy to help with general tips—not personal medical advice.
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