It's the middle of July. In my household, that means it's time to start working on the calendar for the next school year. With the wee ones in school - and my husband as a schoolteacher - my life revolves around the start of the school year. I remember the days when my calendars started in January, but that ship has sailed. My biggest problem in recent years has been trying to coordinate my schedule with my husband's schedule with each of the wee ones' schedules (that are shockingly filling up as they enter school) to ensure that everyone arrives in the right place at the right time and ... we have adequate child care coverage.
Trust me, it's been a problem in my house.
My husband writes something illegible across an entire square of a day, leaving me no room to write anyone else's information. He has a nasty habit of writing "no school" in a square, leaving me to guess later if it's him who has no school, Little Miss who has no school, or Mister Man who has no school - or possibly a combination of the above? It's lovely when I have three people at three different schools, let me tell you. Our calendar has been the source of more than one "disagreement" between my husband and me.
That's stopped for the most part as of last year. I wrote about my BusyBodyBook Organizer and how much easier it was making my life. We'll ignore the part about how one has to actually look at the calendar for it to work properly - witness my husband "forgetting" today to take Mister Man to tae kwon do, although it was on the calendar under Mister Man's box and I reminded him before I headed into the city. Some things apparently can't be fixed by the BusyBodyBook ... yet.
I am still thrilled with the book. The 2011-12 version (which comes both in calendar year and academic year versions) has the same great column idea as the 2010-11 version. It still runs from the first week of August to the first week of September - and thank goodness for the overlap, because we do have activities scheduled into September already, yikes! It has the to do lists both on each week for reminders of what I have to do at a given point in time and that are perforated so that I can rip them out and hand them to others as reminders or use as my shopping lists.
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It even has features that I don't use but that I can see being really useful to others. There are pages to notate recurring dates like birthdays and anniversaries you need to track. There is a month at a glance calendar for the current year (I have a hard enough time writing information down once; it isn't going to happen a second time!), and there is a place to start writing down the plans for the next calendar year as you start edging into that "uh-oh, I have something coming up in six months but my calendar doesn't stretch that far" phase. Sadly, I know me, and I need to write those on the last page of my current calendar rather than being more efficient and writing them on the month for a future calendar as the BusyBodyBook obviously urges. Old habits die hard.
I appreciate that the calendar comes in four different designs - two each for the academic year and calendar year versions - though I never close my book. It is always open to the current week, so I had to actually close my 2010-11 version to even see what my design is. The ones for 2011-12 are new ones, interestingly, perhaps to help ensure you can keep track of which is the current year and which is the next year? My biggest issue with the BusyBodyBook last year is that the bookmark in the calendar was not very sturdy. I moved it once to a new week, and I could never get it to stick in the book again. They took this feedback to heart, and I've tested out the calendar book mark a few times now, and it's much more sturdy and has yet to fall out of the book - even when I shook it sideways. Yay!
The book remains a great size, meaning I can fit it in my purse (10"x7") so keep track of my calendar and commitments while at meetings. Oh and remember those to do lists and weekly notes (or "to doodles" as they're called - it still cracks me up)? Let's just say that those have saved me more than once when I forgot a notepad.
Of course if there were a way to attach a pen to the BusyBodyBook, I'd like it even better. Having a notepad and calendar to write down information is only helpful if and when I have a writing utensil or can beg/borrow/steal one. Even an elastic loop on the front cover would be great. The only other change I'd make to this calendar would be to make the upper right hand corner perforated so I can tear off the top at the conclusion of each week and be able to mark my spot. It's a little easier than the book mark - and my preferred method - although the book mark will work much better this year now that I won't lose it the second time I open my BusyBodyBook.
Are you ready for your own five column calendar to help you organize your life, be it work versus personal life or each child or your co workers or various projects you're working on, I can see this being supremely useful for lots of folks. Better yet, you can buy your BusyBodyBook for $17.95 or you can win your very own copy here because I have a copy to give away! So what do you have to do to win? First of all, let me stress that you must follow all the rules. If you do not follow the rules, your entry will not count!
This contest is open until Tuesday August 2 at 7pm CST. I must have a valid way to reach you, so leave me your email address in your comment or be sure your profile has your email address visible. No duplicate comments will count. This giveaway is open to US residents age 18 and older. Winners will be selected via random.org and must respond within 48 hours of being notified by me or I will select a new winner.
Mandatory Entry: Tell me - what is your biggest calendar challenge?
Bonus Entries (leave a comment for each entry - if you put it all in one comment, I'll count it as one entry):
1) Earn one additional entry for following me on Twitter, then tweeting this contest with the following tweet: "Need to get your life together? Win a BusyBodyBook Organizer from @honestandtruly. http://bit.ly/iZ3k2H" (leave a link to your tweet as your comment and make sure you do all the steps!)
2) Earn one additional entry by following Honest And Truly Reviews publicly via Google Friend Connect.
3) Earn one additional entry by following my “regular” blog Honest & Truly! publicly via Google Friend Connect.
While it won't get you any extra entries, I do encourage you to like Honest & Truly on Facebook so you can stay up to date on giveaways and other cool info and news.
In the interest of full disclosure, I was sent a BusyBodyBook for review purposes. I received no compensation, and all opinions expressed are my own.
I love that calendar! I've never seen one like that before and I really do like it. My biggest calendar challenge is having enough space to write on the weekend spaces. Why do they make them smaller? Odd. And I need note space in the margins.
ReplyDeleteMy biggest calendar challenge is writing appointments down, and then following up on them :) *Thanks* for the giveaway!
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Following @honestandtruly and on Twitter and Tweeted the giveaway
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Publicly following Honest & Truly! with Google Friend Connect {Cheryl F.}
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Keeping track of 2 kids school schedules.
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