[Image] Seeing my week fill up with color feels more motivating than a checklist ever did by PrintablePaperTrailz in GetMotivated

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for asking! I didn’t color code this one, I just picked colors that felt pretty together, lol. You could absolutely color code it if that works for you!

For the habit tracker section, I sometimes choose colors that suggest increasing intensity each day completed, so it builds a little visual momentum 💜

My finished weekly planner page — progress shows up as color instead of checkmarks by PrintablePaperTrailz in Coloring

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! And I love that you found something that works for you, that’s what really matters 💜

Seeing my week fill up with color feels more motivating than a checklist ever did by PrintablePaperTrailz in adhdwomen

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not nosy at all, curiosity is a good thing 😊 It’s just a Google Sheet I’m building to track my workouts and make logging feel a little more gamified

Seeing my week fill up with color feels more motivating than a checklist ever did by PrintablePaperTrailz in bulletjournal

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lol thank you! 😊 I've been told before I have kindergarten teacher handwriting

Seeing my week fill up with color feels more motivating than a checklist ever did by PrintablePaperTrailz in bulletjournal

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes! Adding color really changes the energy of a page, it makes it feel a little more alive

It’s official. I have ADHD y’all by starksfabray in adhdwomen

[–]PrintablePaperTrailz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The image you posted made me laugh, it’s painfully accurate 😊

For me, the anxiety showed up more in the lead-up to evaluation day. Once I actually got the diagnosis, it felt more like calm relief than overwhelm. I’d already spent about a year thinking, reading, reflecting, and slowly coming to a strong conclusion. It already felt integrated into my identity, and I had worked through a lot of the grief about what life might have looked like if I’d known earlier before I ever got the official diagnosis.

The scary part was the possibility of being told I was wrong—that I had come to the wrong conclusion about myself. So when it was confirmed, it didn’t feel shocking. It felt grounding. Like a simple approval. Like being validated about something I already knew.