How to Start a Bullet Journal Notebook Without Overcomplicating It
If you have ever seen an elaborate spread on Pinterest with hand-lettered headers and color-coded trackers and thought "that is beautiful but I don’t think I could do that" — same. Bullet journals can be as elaborate or as simple as you want.
Bullet Journal Page Ideas Worth Adding (Organized by What They Do)
Once you have a bullet journal up and running, the question shifts from "how do I start this?" to "what do I actually put in here?" There are a lot of pages you could make and it can actually be really fun!
4 small habits to keep you productive with school
Here are four genuinely small things that made a huge difference. And I mean SMALL. Like, so small you might think “that’s it?” But trust me, these add up.
What the 48-Hour Rule Is and How to Use It
In February 2026, TikTok creator @by_sydney posted a video about goal setting that stopped a lot of people mid-scroll. She called it the 48-hour rule, and the concept is simple: imagine someone followed you around for the next 48 hours and watched everything you did. Based only on your behavior — not what you say, not what you tell yourself — could they figure out what your goals are?
How to use a calendar when your life actually feels chaotic
Being a student with a different schedule every day, group projects that live and die in chaotic group chats, due dates scattered across five different syllabi, and a social life that operates mostly through spontaneous texts. That is a different situation and it needs a different approach for planning.
Micro Habits: Start So Small It Feels Like Cheating
Most habit advice tells you to start small. Micro habits take that seriously. Not "start small" as in a twenty-minute morning routine instead of an hour-long one. Small as in two minutes. Small as in something so easy it almost feels pointless. Small as in the kind of action you genuinely cannot talk yourself out of on a Tuesday night when you are tired and unmotivated and have already decided today was a write-off.
How to break bad habits as a busy student
You already know which habits you want to break. The late-night phone scrolling that turns one hour into three. The procrastination loop that starts with "just five minutes" and ends with nothing done. The stress eating, the skipping workouts, the staying up too late and then hitting snooze four times. You know what they are. The problem is not awareness.
How to Find a Study Routine That Works for Your Life
Can we talk about those study tips you see everywhere? You know the ones. Wake up at 5am! Study for 4 hours straight! Find a perfectly quiet library corner! Use the Pomodoro technique! Rewrite all your notes in color-coded glory!
The Best Time Management Tools for Students (And How to Actually Pick One)
There are approximately one million productivity apps and tools out there, and at least half of them have been recommended to you by someone who swears it changed their life. The problem is not that these tools do not work. The problem is that the wrong tool for how your brain works is just a well-designed distraction.
How to Stop Procrastinating: What Actually Helps
Okay, real talk: you probably already know procrastination is a problem. You have heard it a hundred times. But knowing it and actually doing something about it are two very different things, especially when your to-do list looks like it was written by someone who wanted to ruin your life.
How to Balance Work and School Without Burning Out
Whoever said "college is the best time of your life!" probably wasn't working 20+ hours a week while taking a full course load. Like, thanks for the input, but if you're currently running on cold brew and pure anxiety, let's talk about what actually helps.
How to Organize Your Syllabus So You Never Miss a Deadline
The first week of a new semester is a lot. You get handed a stack of syllabi, someone explains everything in a rush, and then suddenly class is over and you are supposed to have it all figured out. Most students skim the syllabus once and hope for the best. But the students who never get blindsided by a due date they forgot about? They did something with it on day one.
How to Use Time blocking when your schedule is already full
Time blocking is one of those productivity strategies that sounds a little too "planner influencer" at first. But it is genuinely one of the most useful things you can do when your schedule is full and your brain is tired of making decisions about what to do next.
College Prep for High School Seniors
You're sitting there eating lunch and someone says "So where are you going to college?" and your brain is like — please do not perceive me right now. I just want to eat Cheetos in peace.
How to Do a Sunday Reset Routine That Actually Sets Your Week Up
Monday hits and you realize there are three things due, you cannot find the worksheet, and your brain already feels behind before you have even opened your backpack. A Sunday reset is not about becoming a perfectly organized person. It is just a short routine that helps you start the week with a plan instead of a panic. Think of it as setting future you up for an easier week.
What to Do When Your Ideal Week Isn't Working
It is easy to call it quits on the ideal week. You write down everything you want to happen, plan it all out, and then the actual week looks nothing like it. So you figure the whole system is broken and stop trying.
3 Weekly Reset Journal Prompts That Actually Help You Start Fresh
Some weeks feel smooth. You get things done, you show up the way you wanted to, and by Friday you feel okay about how it all went. Other weeks feel like you blinked and it is already Sunday night and you are not totally sure where the time went.
How to create an ideal week
Let's create an ideal week without losing our minds. Because things are not always ideal and we both know that — but the ideal week helps you plan your activities, priorities, and non-negotiables so you are actually taking steps toward the week you want instead of just surviving whatever shows up.
Find your happy because only you can see the world the way you do
Staying on top of school without losing your mind, making time for the people you love, and figuring out this whole "being a person" thing along the way.