She Does Better

Emilie Burke

  • About Emilie
  • Data

2019 Goals & My Word of the Year

// Goals

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Oh a new year, time to get the ball rolling.

Word of the Year: No.

“No.” is a complete sentence. When I asked to do something- to volunteer, to help, to pick up more than my share of the task, to dive into something I’m only slightly interested in, to bite off more than I can chew- I rarely say No. In 2019, I aim to say no ALL the time. I have enough on my plate.

Every Yes is a No to something else, but every No is just a way of keeping the opportunities coming. A No keeps the door open. It gives you options.

Quite counter to my nature, in 2019, my word of the year is No.

Goal #1: Read 32 books.

Why? This year I found myself wanting to read smaller books to get closer to my goal of 36 books. I averaged 244 pages per book, but I felt the temptation. Moreover, I definitely caught myself turning down books that I worried would take me too long to get through. I know that I can read 32 books/year, so this is just the continuation of that.

Process steps: Reading 2-3 books per month (roughly 650 pages) or 21 pages per day. Keep a reading streak since even a 3-4 days off can lead to weeks.

Needlepoint ornament I gifted to my friend Carol back in 2015

Goal #2: Stitch Savannah Ornament (Needlepoint) + One Baby Gift (Cross Stitch)

Why? This year I struggled to get my needlepoint ornament out the door, but I know how special it is to have these ornaments that capture special things about our lives. I would like this to be something I do every year, just to capture what has been going on. Needlepoint is an expensive hobby, but memories are even more expensive.

This year I’d really like to push myself to also stitch a baby gift. We had two amazing babies come into our life this year, with more coming soon. Stitching a gift is something that always means so much. I already have all the stuff, it’s just an investment of time- one, this year, I’m determined to make.

Process steps: Designate a day of the week (not the weekends) that will be my stitching evening. Leaning towards Thursdays right now; On Thursday (or whatever day of the week it might be), I just stitch while doing whatever it is we’re doing (Netflixing?).

Goal #3: Hit 100K Net Worth (Combined)

Why? They say that the first 100K is the hardest to collect. That will be our goal in 2019. Being debt-free, with two moderate incomes, renters in our rental home, in a groove with YNAB, and reasonable lifestyles, we should be able to hit this (slightly ambitious) goal this year. I say “Net Worth” instead of Cash+Investments because we plan on taking a serious stab at the mortgage on that rental home. (If all goes to plan, I’d love to pay off over 20K of it!)

Here’s my question: do cars count in your net worth? I know J$ includes it in his, but we’ve been wondering if we should. We have about $18K in cars, so this could be the difference between calling this a win or a loss at the end of the year.

We have:

  • two cars
  • one house with mortgage
  • two Roth IRAs, one traditional IRA
  • one Roth TSP, one traditional TSP
  • one emergency fund
  • one car replacement fund
  • one vacation fund
  • one checking account

Process steps: We plan on putting over 5K every months towards our financial goals (big chunk towards the mortgages, maxing out both Roth IRAs, big chunk towards vacation fund, topping off our E-fund, and what-would-have-been-a-car-payment going towards our car replacement fund), but things like our vacation fund won’t build our net worth, so we’ll just have to stick to the plan here because the plan will get us there.

Content Audit Project
Click the image to read the original Content Audit Post

Goal #4: Finish Content Audit

Why? I started this in 2018 and then ran out of steam. I think part of the problem is that I wanted this to be a sprint, but I’m realizing it’s really more of a marathon. Nothing about the steps here has changed, but now I’m carving out 2 hours per week to work on this.

Process Steps: I’ve already scheduled a recurring calendar appointment for two hours every week. I just have to stick to this.

Goals #5: Hit a 300 lb deadlift

Why? I’ve been saying this (albeit, aspirationally) for 3 years now and 2019 will really be the year. I believe that, with training, consistency, and dedication, this is a reasonably achievable goal. In his 2018 Annual Review, James Clear wrote:

The margin between your best performance and your average performance is less than you think. In 2017, I averaged 15.7 workouts per month. In 2018, I averaged 11.7 workouts per month. At first glance, I considered it a modest difference. Only 4 workouts less each month? That’s about one less per week. And I was still making it into the gym consistently.


But then I realized I didn’t set a personal record in any major lift in 2018. Conversely, I hit PRs in nearly every major lift in 2017. One workout per week doesn’t sound like much, but that was the difference between my average performance and my best performance.

It will take almost as much work to continue to be mediocre as it would to actually crush it. I should just crush it.

Process: I have to break it off with my gym. I will finish out my contract and then move on to something else. And then, I will never sign a gym contract again. I need to pick a training plan and just do it. I am to work out 20x/month every month. That should get me where I want to go.

Recap

  1. Read 32 books
  2. Stitch Savannah Ornament (Needlepoint) + One Baby Gift (Cross Stitch)
  3. Hit 100K Net Worth (Combined)
  4. Finish Content Audit
  5. Hit a 300 lb deadlift

In the past, I’ve typically set 10 goals. Setting only 5, though, seems more inline with my theme of No. It’s not about depravity; it’s about abundance- realizing that opportunities will be there when I’m ready for them and that I don’t have to try to seize them all right now.

Previous Yearly Goals:

  • 2018 Goals
  • 2017 Goals
  • Blogging Goals for 2016
Emilie

Emilie is an Army Wife, Data Engineer, and CrossFitter with a love for working through her thoughts in this space on the internet. She lives with her husband Casey and their pup Bo in Savannah, GA.

November 2018 Goals

// Goals

Reading Time: 3 minutesSeptember 2015. That’s when I bought my first pair of Powersheets. I’m not really sure how I got on their email list, but I did, and when I got an email that said “mistake Powersheets on sale now” I jumped, not really sure what I was signing up for. Wow, those Powersheets changed my life. For almost three years, I used my Powersheets diligently month-in and month-out. In July, I decided I was done.

There were a couple of things that happened. First, I felt like the Powersheets branding was getting a bit out of control. While I understand their intention, there was so much emphasis on stickers and making things +~beautiful~+ that I worried they were losing sight of the goal: empower women to cultivate whatever is important to them. As a result, I was offput by the community they were building. If you want to help people achieve their goals, great, but you cannot both say “push yourself to hit these goals” and “it’s okay to make excuses.” Second, I wasn’t enjoying the before-/after-work each month. That means I was really only interested in the monthly tending sheet pages. Sixty-five dollars is a lot to pay for a templated page that’s repeated for 12 months. As a result of these feelings, I will not be buying Powersheets for 2019. 

THAT BEING SAID…

Just because I am not using Powersheets does not mean I don’t have goals!

November Monthly Goals

Finish 4 Books. I am 1 book behind my goal pace for the year (3 per month to finish 36 books), so I’ll need to try to catch up this month with 4 books. I’m currently finishing up a galley copy of [easyazon_link identifier=”0977489523″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Everyday Millionaires[/easyazon_link] by Chris Hogan. This month I’m hoping to also finish (ambitious goals here) [easyazon_link identifier=”1328972356″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Company of One[/easyazon_link] by Paul Jarvis, [easyazon_link identifier=”0062874780″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]It Doesn’t Have to be Crazy at Work[/easyazon_link] by Jason Fried and David Hannemeier Hanson, and [easyazon_link identifier=”1250193680″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Them[/easyazon_link] by Ben Sasse. Ambitious, I know.

Twenty workouts. Just fitness plugging away on being fitness.

Finish Baltimore Ornament. In the beginning of the year, I set the goal of finishing my ornament before July so that it could be finished for Christmas. Clearly that didn’t happen. I’d like to just finish it this month so that I can send it out and get a new one to work on (and hopefully finish earlier) next year.

Don’t die after half marathon. I’m running a half marathon this weekend. I signed up for it less than 3 weeks ago. My goal is to finish under 2:30 and not die.

Picture for Proof I’m insane

Finalize study plan for NASM. My test is coming up in January and I’m behind on studying! I need to make a plan for how to get studying in and all the other things I need to do.

Start planning “relationship summit” for December. I’m not sure where I first heard this term, but we had our first relationship summit last year. It’s essentially a weekend you set aside to talk about goals and where you want to be the following year. It’s a great time to check in on work, roles, responsibilities, and possibilities. Last year, we set the goal of being down to 10K of debt by the end of the year and here we are debt-free.

Finish wedding planning. Here’s the list of things I still need to do for the wedding:

  • Get under the dress things
  • Pay for sabers
  • Finalize rehearsal dinner outfit
  • Buy earrings and bracelet
  • Order ceremony programs
  • Send final guest count to venue and cake place
  • Set aside tip money
  • Work on bathroom baskets
  • Work on Welcome Bags
  • Rent backdrop for seating area
  • Finalize rehearsal dinner program & seating chart

I think that’s everything, but who knows. I’m sure more things will come up.

November Weekly Goals

Write “Last Week in Workouts”. Ideally, I’d write these on Sundays to be published on Monday mornings, but Monday mornings are fine too.

Write Weekly Updates on MyTodoLists.com. These go up on Sundays and a great way for me to look at the landscape of the week.

Work on the Content Audit for 20 minutes every Thursday. That’s all I need to do.

Write 1 blog post every week that is not one of the ones in these goals. Shouldn’t be hard, right?

November Daily Goals

  • Workout
  • Read
  • Floss
  • No Spend
  • Hit my Macros

 

November will be a busy month; there is no doubt about it. It should, though, be an exciting month with family coming from Brazil, and lots of exciting things going on to help keep me busy. I’m certainly excited for what it will bring!

Emilie

Emilie is an Army Wife, Data Engineer, and CrossFitter with a love for working through her thoughts in this space on the internet. She lives with her husband Casey and their pup Bo in Savannah, GA.

Progress is not a straight line.

// Goals

Reading Time: 8 minutes

Amanda was the first workout we did when we moved from The Ranch in 2010 to the Home Depot Center (now the StubHub Center). I programmed the event in memory of Amanda Miller, a 2009 Crossfit Games competitor who was diagnosed with melanoma.

“I just competed in the CF Games less than a year ago and now I’m dying,” she wrote on March 9, 2010.

She passed away on April 23 of that year. She was 24.

After she passed, we were still a few months from the Games, and I decided I would program a workout in memory of her. I wanted something that was like Fran but a step up in difficulty. I played with a lot of combinations but ended up with 9-7-5 reps of muscle-ups and squat snatches at 135 lb. I flipped the order with the weightlifting and gymnastics components. In Fran, the thrusters come before the pull-ups. In Amanda, I placed the gymnastics element first. At the time, I didn’t consider the muscle-up an advanced skill, but it was a step above the pull-up– and that was the point. And the squat snatch at 135 lb. was obviously a step up from the thruster at 95. Understand that not many workouts back then contained squat snatches at 135, especially for reps or paired with muscle-ups. So some viewed Amanda as a heavier test, which led to its 9-7-5 rep scheme. At the time, those reps were appropriate, as was the loading.

At the 2010, CrossFit Games, Chris Spealler had the fastest time: 3:29. Games rookie Neal Maddox was second, with 3:45….

In 2010, a new unknown kid from Tennessee had the third fastest Amanda time: 3:47. He would go on to take second overall, and he eventually dominated the sport. That was Rich Froning, of course.

Another future champ, Ben Smith had the fifth fastest time: 4:01. In 2017, Smith did Amanda at 185 lb in 4:06, and Josh Bridges recently posted a video in which he does it with the same load in 3:36. His time was 10 seconds better than our second-fasted time at 135 in 2010. That’s how far the sport has progressed.

When I read this excerpt from Dave Castro’s latest book Constructing the Crossfit Games (98-99), I was stopped in my tracks. A Decade of Fitness, the CrossFit documentary chronicling the 2016 games, emphasizes the same point. These lines say, Look at how far we’ve come.

I love looking at progress. Progress is how we measure that we’ve gone from Point A to Point B. It is the movement from one progress to the other. At a glance, it seems like progress can take us anywhere.

You want to run a marathon? Train a little every day over 30 weeks and you can do it!

You want to lose weight? It won’t happen overnight, but if you work at it, little by little, you can.

You want to learn a new language? Use that DuoLingo app every single day and soon enough you’ll be parlez vous francais-ing all day long.

These are the lies that society tells us about progress. Everything can be done if you’re just willing to buckle down and work at it. While at a first glance, you might agree, the fact is this is only half true. What about when you can’t buckle down and work at it, though? What about when you’d like to learn a language but it’s not a priority over your college classes? What about when you’d like to lose some weight but you’re working 60 hours a week to get closer to your debt freedom goal? To riff off Paula Pant, Anything can be done if you’re willing to buckle down and work at it, but not everything.

Progress feels like it should be this straight line, this clear trajectory, up and to the right, like from the minute you start diligently going to the gym, decide to start paying off your debt, or learn a new language, you should only get better.

At least that’s what I thought.

Life Happens

August 1, 2016 was my first day at Crossfit, specifically Crossfit Raeford in Raeford, NC. At the time, my membership cost me $135 per month. I remember feeling like it was an absurd amount of money to spend on a gym membership, especially because I had never been that diligent about committing to a gym membership before. I did the math, though- $135 for 20ish classes was $7 per class. If I had no problem paying $10 to drop into a yoga class as a social event, I was willing to pay $7 per CrossFit class, right?

I wasn’t joining CrossFit exactly for the health reasons. I had been living in North Carolina for almost 3 months at that point. I was lucky enough to have brought my job with me, but I hadn’t brought any friends. I would wake up and move from my bedroom to my home office down the hall with an occasional stop in the kitchen downstairs.

When I joined CrossFit, it was the welcome obligation outside of the home. I’m an Obliger, so spending a ton of money on my gym membership and joining a class setting where classmates and a coach were waiting for me made me accountable to go. (It was in that class that I met Fort Bragg BFF Angie❤️) While I thought joining CrossFit would get me in better shape, I was joining CrossFit primarily because I was lonely.

It became, thus, a two-birds-one-stone solution. I got out of the house every day, making me a better employee, girlfriend, and human being. I had contact with people other than C every single day. I was happier.

Slowly but surely, though, I also became healthier. I’m not sure when it happened, but I looked up one day in January and realized I had developed definition in my traps. My biceps were beautiful. I was doing the WOD Monday through Saturday every week to start my day. I hadn’t gone into CrossFit interested in my physical well-being, but it had been a much- welcome side product.

From that January, my fitness only seemed to continue upward-and-to-the-right. Every time we tested our PRs- personal records- for different lifts, I saw mine go up. My 55 lbs squat snatch slowly climes to 70 then 85. My squat clean started below 100 and then somewhere along the way I started doing 100 for reps. In the beginning, I struggled to hang from the bar for 30 seconds. By the time the Open rolled around that winter, I had toes-to-bar so well that I did 17.2 RX. That July, I PR’d my deadlift at 245 lbs. Progress had, by all means, been up and to the right.

Then I decided I wasn’t going to go to the Saturday WODs anymore. They were always partner WODs and being the type-A, high-D jerk I can be, I didn’t like partner WODs. Suddenly my norm of 6 days a week became five.

Then things would come up. I’d have to go to the post office, meet a friend for something, or run some other errand, and I would feel like I had to pick between going to the gym and meeting this obligation. This was kinda true. I did (and still do) work. Since I went to the 8 AM class, it was often 9:30 or 10 AM by the time I sat down at my desk- not a problem since the company I worked for was based in the next time zone over. I started work when my coworkers did. However, if I needed to do something, anything during the day, I felt like I needed to put in that extra time at work (rightfully so), and since I didn’t have that time anywhere else in the day, I would skip going to the gym to start work earlier.

By now, the $135 per month that I had agonized over spending on my gym membership in the beginning was now just a regular line item in my budget. My lifestyle had slowly inflated right before my eyes.

Slowly, unfortunately, the 6 days per week I had been attending were now a lucky 3 or 4.

The real stickler in my linear-progress, though, came when I stopped tracking my macros. I had been casually tracking my macros since within a month of starting CrossFit. I was no tightwad, and I did not plan my meals, but I ate something and put it in my app. I was using the app often enough that it was worth paying the $50 to get the full functionality. After listening to the Girls Gone WOD podcast series on the Whole 30, I was inspired to do my own Whole 30 and that was the end of my macro tracking. Suddenly, I went from tracking everything to tracking nothing overnight. And then life changed drastically.

Just like that my up-and-to-the-right progress ended.

I feel like I’ve shared repeatedly just how reckless that end-of-last-summer was to my well being, and that over a year later now I still feel like I’m recovering from it, but I will give you the short version: I got engaged that September and that kicked off a new pattern of travel that had me away from my home for at least one week every month. Three weeks in Brasil in September, three weeks in Europe in October, one week in Ohio in November, the holidays in the northeast in December, and on and on. With many wedding-related trips back to New Jersey (including finalizing a venue, buying a wedding dress, and my first fitting), a trip to Chile, another to South Africa, a conference in Nashville, three conferences in Orlando, and a whole deployment, my progress has not been a straight line up and to the right. I am, and have been, as back into the swing of things as I can be, considering my schedule.

Progress doesn’t need to be a straight line.

I think the natural tendency, certainly my tendency, is to feel like I’m starting all over, like any loss in progress is just the same as never having made progress at all. Last week, though, I was working on this complex of 1 deadlift, 2 hang power cleans, and a jerk and I hit 125 lbs before it really started feeling heavy.

I was checking in on Amazon’s stock performance the other day and I thought that did a really good job portraying my point.

5 Day
1 Day

When you Google “Amazon stock” the first thing that comes up is today’s stock progress. This particular day was not a great day for Amazon. Even if you back it out to the 5-day view, it doesn’t look great. It’s easy to just look at this and wonder Is Amazon not doing well?!

1 Year
All Time

Looking at that all-time graph, tell me: Do you think Jeff Bezos is worried about the 1-day progress of Amazon? When you step back and look at the many-year view of Amazon’s performance, this week is barely decipherable from the overall trend.

What I’ve come to realize is that the non-linearity of progress is fine. It is what real progress looks like. Today does not need to be better than yesterday in order for progress to be made. Today doesn’t even need to be better than last week. Today just needs to be better than when I started. Progress, any progress, is still progress and rather than beat myself up for how I’m not the same as my peak, what I can do is recognize that peak is somewhere I can work to get to again.

Some time ago, a friend moved home where her husband went away for a two-month training. During those two months, she did not participate in any workout, structured or not- she called it a no-workout-cation. When she returned, she griped at all the gains she had lost. I remember thinking that she was insane, that two months off were not going to undo everything she had gained over the last year.

That was a year ago, and now here I am reminding myself of the same. I’m realizing, I never fell off the wagon, I just decelerated some.

The non-linearity of progress can be frustrating! Let it frustrate you! Repackage that frustration into motivation, and this non-linear stint will just be a blip on your all-time progress too.

Emilie

Emilie is an Army Wife, Data Engineer, and CrossFitter with a love for working through her thoughts in this space on the internet. She lives with her husband Casey and their pup Bo in Savannah, GA.

July 2018 Goals

// Goals

Reading Time: 3 minutesWelcome to July 2018 Goals Post! I love writing these goal reports every single month because they force me to sit down and evaluate how I’m doing, more specifically, how am I trending towards the goals I’ve set for myself for the year. Am I making progress? Are those goals still relevant? If not, they go. No time to waste on things that aren’t important! Instead, I’m focusing on the things that I want to finish!

Remember that my monthly goals are all aiming to bring me closer to the 10 goals I set for myself in 2018, all centered around my word of the year of Finish. They are:

  1. Read 36 books with buying ANY.
  2. Get into and sustain the best shape of my life.
  3. Stitch my Baltimore ornament in time to have it finished for Christmas (July).
  4. Budget together to hit our financial goals.
  5. Date each other more intentionally.
  6. Correct legal & business systems for the business.
  7. Invest in ME without spending any more money.
  8. Rebrand all content from BD to She Does Better.

Since it’s the middle of the year, I sat down to reevaluate these ten goals. How am I doing against them? Do they still make sense? Here’s what I’ve since culled my goals down to, still inspired by my word of the year, Finish:

  1. Read 36 books.
    1. Read 3 books monthly.
    2. Current progress: 18 down, 18 to go. On track.
  2. Get into a maintainable state of fitness that I feel good about.
    1. Hit 20 DUs, a 300 lb deadlift, and think about a half marathon.
    2. Current progress: every month I’m getting a little bit better about being myself at the gym again.
  3. Finish Baltimore ornament, and order next year’s.
  4. Financial Goals
    1. Wedding Fully Funded ✅
    2. Car paid off ✅
    3. Cow loan paid off
  5. Put up a landing page for AOTM and stop working on it.
  6. SEO & Content Audit, with new opt-ins, content, and graphics
  7. [Something, something, something]

With these refreshed goals, I was able to plan for a more successful July. Before that, let’s catch up on June.

June 2018 Goals

  • Read 3 books. ✅ I finished [easyazon_link identifier=”0143117467″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Shop Class as Soulcraft[/easyazon_link], [easyazon_link identifier=”0735219818″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Off the Clock by Laura Vanderkam[/easyazon_link], and [easyazon_link identifier=”0062693980″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]We are Going to Need More Wine by Gabrielle Union[/easyazon_link].
  • Workout 18 times. 👎 Nope and no guilt.
  • Finish Baltimore Ornament 👎 Nope and no guilt.
  • Finish the budget transition to YNAB. ✅ Why didn’t I do this sooner?
  • Organizing the House, part 2. 👎 Nope and no guilt.
  • Work on Nanodegree👎 Nope and no guilt.

Here are my Powersheets goals for July:

July 2018 Goals

July Monthly Goals

  • Read 3 books. I plan to read [easyazon_link identifier=”0060888601″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]AWOL: The Unexcused Absence of America’s Upper Classes from Military Service by Kathy Roth-Douquet[/easyazon_link], [easyazon_link identifier=”0446585041″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Seriously…I’m Kidding by Ellen Degeneres[/easyazon_link], and a third TBD book.
  • Finish Baltimore Ornament from Needlepoint.com, so I can send it off this month. I think mid-August is the deadline for Christmas finishing, but we both know that it can take me a couple of weeks to get to the post office.
  • Workout 18 times. I’m signed up for 8 OTF classes, so this is totally reasonable.
  • Get the cow loan below $11K. Ambitious money goals.
  • Organize my bedroom dresser. I don’t have that many clothes, so this is really just a 2-hour project (I think).
  • Organize hall closet. This is an all-day project.

July Weekly Goals

  • Publish weekly on MyToDoLists.com.
  • Publish weekly on She Does Better.
  • Write weekly money report.
  • Spent at least 2 hours working on the content audit.
  • Read specified chapters of Business Boutique.
  • Stay on track on my NASM course.

July Daily Goals

  • Workout.
  • Read.
  • Floss.

Your turn! Do you have goals for July? What are you trying to make happen this month?

Emilie

Emilie is an Army Wife, Data Engineer, and CrossFitter with a love for working through her thoughts in this space on the internet. She lives with her husband Casey and their pup Bo in Savannah, GA.

June 2018 Goals

// Goals

Reading Time: 3 minutesWelcome to June’s Goal Setting Post! Does anyone else feel like May flew by? I feel like I blinked and that was it! I love writing these goal reports every single month because they force me to sit down and evaluate how I’m doing, more specifically, how am I trending towards the goals I’ve set for myself for the year. Am I making progress ? Are those goals still relevant? If not, they go. No time to waste on things that aren’t important! Instead, I’m focusing on the things that I want to finish!

Remember that my monthly goals are all aiming to bring me closer to the 10 goals I set for myself in 2018, all centered around my word of the year of Finish. They are:

  1. Read 36 books with buying ANY.
  2. Get into and sustain the best shape of my life.
  3. Stitch my Baltimore ornament in time to have it finished for Christmas (July).
  4. Budget together to hit our financial goals.
  5. Date each other more intentionally.
  6. Correct legal & business systems for the business.
  7. Invest in ME without spending any more money.
  8. Rebrand all content from BD to She Does Better.

May Monthly Goals

  • Read 3 books. 👎 I finished [easyazon_link identifier=”0399573267″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Priestdaddy by Patricia Lockwood[/easyazon_link] and [easyazon_link identifier=”1501139894″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo by Amy Schumer[/easyazon_link].
  • Workout 20 times. 👎 Only 13, but I did okay. I didn’t work out while my Dad was in town and when I was in NJ. Otherwise, I made it to the gym at least 4 times per week.
  • Finish Wedding Fund & Put a Big Chunk of 💰 towards my car. ✅ Wedding is funded. Car loan down to 10K.
  • Organizing the House, part 2. 👎 I only did the pantry, but I have NO travel planned for June, so I’ve deferred this until next month.
  • Finish Memoir Class – Final Piece due May 17. ✅ The final result was a 5000 word piece that used cars as a conceit to carry you through my life. I’m really proud of it and hope to take another writing class at The Refinery soon!
  • Work on Nanodegree: Finish P1 Explore & P2 Wrangling. 🙃 No comments.
  • Write 2 “cold” pitches to new sources. ✅

Here are my Powersheets goals for June:

June 2018 Goals

June Monthly Goals

  • Read 3 books. I plan to read [easyazon_link identifier=”0143117467″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Shop Class as Soulcraft[/easyazon_link], [easyazon_link identifier=”0735219818″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Off the Clock by Laura Vanderkam[/easyazon_link], [easyazon_link identifier=”0060888601″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]AWOL: The Unexcused Absence of America’s Upper Classes from Military Service by Kathy Roth-Douquet[/easyazon_link], and [easyazon_link identifier=”0062693980″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]We are Going to Need More Wine by Gabrielle Union[/easyazon_link].
  • Workout 18 times. I’ll be home by June 5 with no more traveled planned! This is totally reasonable.
  • Finish Baltimore Ornament from Needlepoint.com, so I can have this sent off to be finished in time for Christmas.
  • Finish the budget transition to YNAB. Learnvest, the budgeting software I’ve been using for 3 years, is shutting down!
  • Organizing the House, part 2. This means going through the guest closet, the hall closet, and my dresser. And.. unpacking the bridal shower goodness.
  • Work on Nanodegree: Finish P1 Explore & P2 Wrangling. I have no travel, I have no classes. This is what I need to do.

June Weekly Goals

  • Read 150 pages.
  • Read target chapter in [easyazon_link identifier=”1942121032″ locale=”US” tag=”burkedoes-20″]Business Boutique[/easyazon_link].
  • Publish TDL post.
  • Publish a blog post here.
  • Send the weekly money report.
  • Update Content Audit post.

June Daily Goals

  • Workout.
  • Read.
  • Work on Nanodegree.
  • Floss

Your turn! Do you have goals for June? What are you trying to make happen this month?

Emilie

Emilie is an Army Wife, Data Engineer, and CrossFitter with a love for working through her thoughts in this space on the internet. She lives with her husband Casey and their pup Bo in Savannah, GA.

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • …
  • 11
  • Next Page »

Copyright © 2021 · Fresh theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2021 · Fresh Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in