Without going into the reasons for life logging yet, I will first discuss my methods. This is to give you an idea of what it means to develop and use some systems to inspect your life for greater insight, reflection and self control.
This is an overview and I'd like to go into detail in each one of my strategies eventually. I'll also explore the thing that motivates me to do this, and the various reasons for and against it, and why it comes out on top for me.
Arguably the most immediately fun and cool self tracking and management is in the digital sphere. For me a lot of this centres around Android gear. I use an Android phone and an Android watch. I'm currently using a Nexus 6 phone and my watch is a Polar M600.
This is a screenshot of my main home screen
These are all apps I actively use and which contribute to my self tracking, reflection and management. These are the best I've found so far, and I've tried a lot, so I'm implicitly recommending them all.
Pretty much each of them deserve a full post to be written about them so for the moment here's an overview, in order of left to right, top to bottom.
The reason I got the watch is because it runs Android Wear 2.0 (just this week rebranded to Wear OS by Google) and has a lot sensors, including GPS. All of this means you can leave your phone at home when you go for runs or walks, as you can even connect a set of bluetooth headphones to the watch and listen to podcasts or music.
For me this is main one. Polar have their own activity tracking app which is quite good. But there are a few good apps for this too, such as Google Fit and the Underarmor group of apps. You can generally share information between each app no problem so the one you actually use should just have a good front end interface, and I think Polar's own app is the best as it gives nice detailed feedback, as well as human readable feedback.
Examples
I turn off all sound and vibrate notification on my phone when I'm wearing the watch (which is most of the time) so the watch just buzzes on my wrist. I like this because if I'm cooking or talking to someone I can glance at my watch no matter where my phone is.
It's also good for reminders and alarms, because you can't really ignore something buzzing on your wrist as easily as your phone!
I'm still not sure I like the watch for this. I've found that wearing it all day and all night to be too much. I'm thinking of getting a different device to track sleep, so while some people like this I prefer being able to completely disconnect and take everything off at night.
I'll do another post some other time about more watch features and why Wear OS is really quite good once you've bitten the bullet and bought the hardware.
It's not all about the gadgets! In fact digital reliance and even addiction is an increasing problem in our societies. Another problem is all the companies who want data about you. I'm not talking about your data, such as your photos and so on, I'm talking about detailed biometric data, how we use devices and tracking our every move.
This poses an ethical and practical tension between life loggers and big data companies. I'm not going to go into it right here though, except to say I'm aware of it and I always try to opt for solutions which silo data locally, and take data actually off digital devices when possible.
Here are some examples:
Here's a very very blurred image of my whiteboard
I need to do that to protect my privacy but you get the idea. I have 4 colours of post-it notes that I use, in order of increasing importance or urgency: yellow, green, orange, and pink.
These are arranged on semi-flexible swimlanes, kind of like Kanban but without the same strictness.
This is really my main area of personal management. I used to use various digital lists, calendars and so on but now I have very few digital versions and this is my main tool of organisation. If I need to schedule going to the doctor, it goes here. When I was planning on writing this article, the idea went here first on a post-it. I have lots of hobbies and personal projects too, and the tasks for those are split up. When I get an idea for a new app or project, I just note it down here.
I think the main benefit is being able to look at a summary of nearly everything I'm doing in one physical place. It matters that it's not on a screen. There's no mode switching, no potential data loss, no running out of battery or notifications popping up on the screen. It's simple and clean.
I still use digital todo lists and calendars but they are generally for collaboration with others, for small daily stuff like grocery lists, or notes when I'm out and about that will make it to the whiteboard when I get home.
I love books. They are so fundamental to learning and in the digital age they become both more and less important as their role changes. They less important because we can read the same stuff on computers, which has greatly reduced costs of knowledge dissemination and storage across the world. However conversely they become more important because holding something in your hand, looking at a surface which is not backlit, and not feeling the creep of distraction on screen, these things are hugely beneficial.
The first life loggers were the great diarists and letter writers of the past. Some of our most revered minds kept detailed logs not only of their thoughts but their habits, moods, etc. and tracked everything by writing on paper.
I used to journal all the time and I recently burned up all my old journals to mark me leaving behind my childhood and adolescence finally. However I started a new journal which I hope to be of similar benefit from here, the One Line a Day dairy, which does exactly what it says on the tin. It's a challenge both to keep up the habit every day and to keep it short, but it's been really nice so far.
I have always used notebooks for taking down thoughts, making shopping lists, doodling, etc. These days I use them for project planning and short personal reminders and notes. The little brown notebook you see there is a moleskin style, my favourite style, and is the temporary notebook when out and about. If I'm going to do a task from the whiteboard, I stick the post-it on the inside cover, and make any notes for post-it tracking. It has completely replaced taking notes on my phone. I burn these when done.
I still find that when reading poetry, deep life advice or a long story, I much prefer physical books. It has become harder and harder to focus when reading I have to admit, but this shows up all the more why it's important. While reading is not strictly to do with life logging and management, the act of reading itself almost requires the level of discipline you can get from those things.
I don't think you can successfully life log without doing a lot of reflection. I'm trying to get back into meditation, but not even sitting-down-eyes-closed-breathing meditation is required. Meditation can just be reflecting on what you are doing, how that fits in with your life and goals. What I'm saying is that it's important to not only do the things, but also think about them deeply.
To do this you need to create space in your life, and that is in a tension with management. For example it's hard to say "ok I'm going to relax for 13 minutes" because of the time limit, you might find yourself thinking about that time ending. So you need to do all this in moderation. It might sound like there's no space for that in this long list of things I do, but actually I find that by doing this stuff well (when I do it well...) , I gradually increase my ability to not let life's pressures get in the way of sitting beside the fire for an hour or so, all devices away, only the sound of the flames keeping me company.