Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts
You made it to Day 7—and now it’s time to take what worked and keep it with you.

Today’s task is to write down 3 small but powerful reset intentions for the school year. 

They could be:

📝 “Drink water before coffee”
📝 “Leave work at work”
📝 “Move my body every day”


Whatever you choose—keep it visible. 

On your mirror. In your planner. As your phone background.

Why it matters
Writing intentions down gives you a north star to come back to when things get busy.

This reset doesn’t have to end. You can keep building on these tiny habits, one day at a time.

I’m cheering you on every step of the way 💛

You deserve a peaceful ending to your day.



Your sleep deserves better. So today’s reset is about what you don’t do: scroll, check email, or binge late-night reels.


✅ Set a screen-free zone for the last 30 minutes of your day


✅ Replace it with something gentle: stretching, reading, journaling


✅ Bonus: Use a Calm peptide to help your body relax into rest


Your brain, body, and nervous system will thank you.

Why it matters: Blue light, endless scrolls, and mental overload keep your brain alert when you should be resting. Logging off helps you sleep deeper and feel more refreshed in the morning.

📥 Need help winding down? The Reset Guide includes a bedtime routine checklist you can print or keep by your bed.

One more reset to go—you’re doing amazing!

Clear space, clear mind

You don’t need to Marie Kondo your whole house.

Just 5 minutes. One surface.

✅ Set a timer for 5 minutes
✅ Pick a space (fridge, pantry, counter, etc.)
✅ Toss, wipe, tidy. That’s it.

You don’t have to finish it all - just start.


Visual clutter = mental clutter.

Even a quick reset creates room to breathe.

Day 2 is all about starting strong—before coffee.


Drinking 20 oz of water before 10 am can kickstart your energy, help with digestion, and even improve focus. It’s one of the easiest ways to take care of yourself before the chaos begins.


💡 Bonus Tip: Add lemon or electrolytes for extra benefits. I love mixing in my MAKE Hydrated and Fit peptides to really fuel my mornings!


Start the habit: Keep a water bottle by your bed or set a phone reminder. Simple tweaks = big wins.


Can’t get in 20 oz? Do 10. Or even just 8. The point is to drink water first thing in the morning to get your body up and going. 


📥 Grab the free Reset Guide with daily trackers and bonus tips to help build your hydration habit!



You’re already 2 days in. Let’s keep the momentum going!

Don’t forget to have your Daily Reset Time. Drink some more water while you’re at it!

Day 3 drops tomorrow 👏


This is your chance to take a breath, open up your planner or app, and choose one time each day to check in with you.

Your goal:

📝 Spend 15–30 minutes at the beginning of each week to do a weekly planning sprint: meals, movement, and must-dos.
🕐 Then, each day, pick a daily reset time (morning, mid-day, or evening) to review your meals, movement, and must-dos and check in where you are for that day.

It doesn’t have to be a big reset time; even 1 to 2 minutes to check in with yourself is a huge advantage to your overall mindset. 

You know that moment when your planner looks like a Pinterest board but your actual life looks like an unfinished group project?

Same.

When you're tired, bloated, and running on fumes, the last thing you need is a planning system that overwhelms you even more.

Here are the tools and tricks that help me plan my days without burning out.


First: Ditch the Perfect Plan

Perfection isn't the goal. Feeling supported is.

I used to write these color-coded, high-achieving schedules and then immediately feel like a failure when I couldn’t stick to them.

Now? I plan for real life. The kind where bloating, brain fog, and burnout are part of the equation.


My Low-Energy Planning Tech Stack

1. Canva Weekly Planner Template

Simple, customizable, and reusable. I plug in my tasks, meals, movement, and self-care in one place. It makes the week feel doable.

Grab it for free HERE as a PDF
And here's the Canva Template.

2. Google Keep

Color-coded blocks help me visually separate work, home, and rest. I schedule breaks like appointments and set alerts to remind me to, you know… eat.

Want some headers? Here's my Canva Template!

3. ChatGPT

When I’m mentally tapped out, I let ChatGPT help me outline posts, meals, or write gentle to-do lists. The key? Don't copy it word for word; make it your own!


Peptides to the Rescue

I sip MAKE Hydrated or Energized when I sit down to plan. It helps reduce brain fog, ease bloating, and boost clarity.

When I pair that with a small stretch or walk before planning, I feel more energized and clear-headed.


Check out these Peptides HERE. I recommend looking into the Science! 


Planning in Survival Mode? Try This:

Instead of a full schedule, I list one thing per category:

  • Must-do

  • Move-your-body

  • Eat/fuel

Three things. That’s it. Everything else is a bonus.

And if you're dealing with a bloated belly or foggy brain? Try planning standing up, drinking water while you write, or even talking your plan out loud into a voice note.


TL;DR

Planning while exhausted doesn’t need to be pretty.

Use tools that simplify, not complicate. Let your plan reflect your real life, not your highlight reel.

And when all else fails? Drink water, write down three things, and let the rest go.

You’re doing better than you think.

Happy New Year everyone!! I hope your holidays were fabulous and that your new year has been wonderful so far!

Thanks for joining Pelicans and Pipsqueaks and me for this month's Thoughts on Thursday. Today we are talking all about resolutions!

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