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    <title>Journaling &amp;mdash; Dave the Nomad</title>
    <link>https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Journaling</link>
    <description></description>
    <pubDate>Thu, 21 May 2026 16:52:23 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title>A pretty big realization about myself - and how to move forward with it</title>
      <link>https://nomadave.writeas.com/a-pretty-big-realization-about-myself-and-how-to-move-forward-with-it?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[After last week&#39;s post, I started going down a rabbit hole of research on indecision, because I recognized that I was struggling to make decisions where there&#39;s no clear upside or downside.&#xA;&#xA;That led to going down an ADHD rabbit hole, buying a book called Driven to Distraction, and almost finishing it in the span of a couple of days. This coming from the guy who has been reading two other books for the last 3 months and is nowhere close to finishing them. Fixation much?&#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;I hate to self-diagnose, but a lot of the ADHD experience resonates with me. And it&#39;s not just casual forgetfulness and procrastination, it&#39;s a deep inability to follow through on things, an inability to start things even though I want to do them. The need for a structure in order to get anything done. Episodes of hyperfixation where I go really deep on something, lose sleep over it, forget to eat and drink and shower. Hell, even on a regular basis, I forget to shower unless it&#39;s in my task list.&#xA;&#xA;That being said, I also feel like my experience is manageable enough without medication and with the proper structure and systems in place. Whether or not I have it, the mental model of ADHD helps me recognize and understand some of my behaviour, and how to cope and manage it better. I don&#39;t feel like a professional diagnosis would change anything.&#xA;&#xA;What happened this week?&#xA;&#xA;Engaging with the ADHD rabbit hole gave me a huge energy spike. For the last couple of months, I&#39;ve been trying to figure out how to feel that energy spike. How to get that energy back. I&#39;ve been in an energy trough for so long. What&#39;s interesting is that my eating, sleeping, and exercise habits didn&#39;t change at all. The only thing that changed is that my brain was engaged on a new topic. How do I sustain that engagement? Can I sustain it? Is it even sustainable? Or do I have to accept the rotating highs and lows as that’s just how my brain works?&#xA;&#xA;What went well?&#xA;&#xA;I found it really helped me to check-in on a daily basis with a variety of people to help keep me focused and accountable. I checked in and shared my daily intentions with my best friend and my step-daughter, who I thought would also benefit from a daily check-in.&#xA;&#xA;I also started doing daily writing check-ins on the Mindly.Social Discord server. I set a specific daily writing goal: 250 words or sit for an hour, whichever happens first. And having multiple projects to choose from - this blog, my travel blog, and a possible fiction project - helps me make sure I write, even if I&#39;m not feeling into one of those projects.&#xA;&#xA;With the new insight about structure, I worked on building a habit stacking plan.&#xA;&#xA;What didn&#39;t go so well?&#xA;&#xA;Given my fixation on the ADHD rabbit hole, it was incredibly hard to get focused on work. The only time I managed to get any real work done was when there was serious external pressure - something broke and I needed to urgently fix it, or I felt like someone at work was waiting for something specific to be done. Deadlines for the win, I guess?&#xA;&#xA;Daily physical activity eluded me. I totally forgot to do any kind of finance management on the weekend, and even forgot to get some bills paid. Thankfully I did remember eventually - at 2:30am Sunday night :D&#xA;&#xA;What did I learn?&#xA;&#xA;I learned how important and necessary structure is to my sense of well-being. On top of that, I learned that having a trusted friend or group of people to keep me accountable contributes greatly to that structure. Using tools like body doubling, coaching, and accountibilibuddies, are necessary to my success and consistency.&#xA;&#xA;How can I improve next week?&#xA;&#xA;I need to manage my expectations, and realize that I can&#39;t change everything all at once. With that in mind, I need to focus on building one consistent habit for at least the next couple of weeks, before I can consider adding another one.&#xA;&#xA;That habit is writing. Every day, after I finish writing in my journal, I&#39;ll write at least 300 words or sit for an hour.&#xA;&#xA;Next week, I also want to finish building a habit stacking plan for myself, and making adjustments to my journal to add more structure to my planning.&#xA;&#xA;#ADHD #Mindfulness #SelfCare #Journaling #PersonalGrowth #Neurodivergent #AmWriting #Writing #WritingCommunity #Habits]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After <a href="https://write.as/nomadave/reflecting-on-january" title="last week&#39;s post" rel="nofollow">last week&#39;s post</a>, I started going down a rabbit hole of research on indecision, because I recognized that I was struggling to make decisions where there&#39;s no clear upside or downside.</p>

<p>That led to going down an ADHD rabbit hole, buying a book called Driven to Distraction, and almost finishing it in the span of a couple of days. This coming from the guy who has been reading two other books for the last 3 months and is nowhere close to finishing them. Fixation much?</p>



<p>I hate to self-diagnose, but <em>a lot</em> of the ADHD experience resonates with me. And it&#39;s not just casual forgetfulness and procrastination, it&#39;s a deep inability to follow through on things, an inability to start things even though I want to do them. The need for a structure in order to get anything done. Episodes of hyperfixation where I go <em>really deep</em> on something, lose sleep over it, forget to eat and drink and shower. Hell, even on a regular basis, I forget to shower unless it&#39;s in my task list.</p>

<p>That being said, I also feel like my experience is manageable enough without medication and with the proper structure and systems in place. Whether or not I have it, the mental model of ADHD helps me recognize and understand some of my behaviour, and how to cope and manage it better. I don&#39;t feel like a professional diagnosis would change anything.</p>

<h2 id="what-happened-this-week" id="what-happened-this-week">What happened this week?</h2>

<p>Engaging with the ADHD rabbit hole gave me a huge energy spike. For the last couple of months, I&#39;ve been trying to figure out how to feel that energy spike. How to get that energy back. I&#39;ve been in an energy trough for so long. What&#39;s interesting is that my eating, sleeping, and exercise habits didn&#39;t change at all. The only thing that changed is that my brain was engaged on a new topic. How do I sustain that engagement? <em>Can</em> I sustain it? Is it even sustainable? Or do I have to accept the rotating highs and lows as that’s just how my brain works?</p>

<h3 id="what-went-well" id="what-went-well">What went well?</h3>

<p>I found it really helped me to check-in on a daily basis with a variety of people to help keep me focused and accountable. I checked in and shared my daily intentions with my best friend and my step-daughter, who I thought would also benefit from a daily check-in.</p>

<p>I also started doing daily writing check-ins on the Mindly.Social Discord server. I set a specific daily writing goal: 250 words <em>or</em> sit for an hour, whichever happens first. And having multiple projects to choose from – this blog, my travel blog, and a possible fiction project – helps me make sure I write, even if I&#39;m not feeling into one of those projects.</p>

<p>With the new insight about structure, I worked on building a habit stacking plan.</p>

<h3 id="what-didn-t-go-so-well" id="what-didn-t-go-so-well">What didn&#39;t go so well?</h3>

<p>Given my fixation on the ADHD rabbit hole, it was incredibly hard to get focused on work. The only time I managed to get any real work done was when there was serious external pressure – something broke and I needed to urgently fix it, or I felt like someone at work was waiting for something specific to be done. Deadlines for the win, I guess?</p>

<p>Daily physical activity eluded me. I totally forgot to do any kind of finance management on the weekend, and even forgot to get some bills paid. Thankfully I did remember eventually – at 2:30am Sunday night :D</p>

<h3 id="what-did-i-learn" id="what-did-i-learn">What did I learn?</h3>

<p>I learned how important and necessary structure is to my sense of well-being. On top of that, I learned that having a trusted friend or group of people to keep me accountable contributes greatly to that structure. Using tools like body doubling, coaching, and accountibilibuddies, are necessary to my success and consistency.</p>

<h3 id="how-can-i-improve-next-week" id="how-can-i-improve-next-week">How can I improve next week?</h3>

<p>I need to manage my expectations, and realize that I can&#39;t change everything all at once. With that in mind, I need to focus on building one consistent habit for at least the next couple of weeks, before I can consider adding another one.</p>

<p>That habit is writing. Every day, after I finish writing in my journal, I&#39;ll write at least 300 words or sit for an hour.</p>

<p>Next week, I also want to finish building a habit stacking plan for myself, and making adjustments to my journal to add more structure to my planning.</p>

<p><a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:ADHD" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">ADHD</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Mindfulness" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Mindfulness</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:SelfCare" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">SelfCare</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Journaling" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Journaling</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:PersonalGrowth" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">PersonalGrowth</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Neurodivergent" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Neurodivergent</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:AmWriting" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">AmWriting</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Writing" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Writing</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:WritingCommunity" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">WritingCommunity</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Habits" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Habits</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://nomadave.writeas.com/a-pretty-big-realization-about-myself-and-how-to-move-forward-with-it</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2023 16:20:11 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Reflecting on January</title>
      <link>https://nomadave.writeas.com/reflecting-on-january?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[I struggle with writing consistently. As I begin writing this post, I&#39;m feeling incredibly self-conscious: who cares about my life? Who cares what I did or how I felt in January? Who cares what I&#39;m hoping to accomplish in February?&#xA;&#xA;I feel the same way about writing for my travel blog: like everything I write has to have a clear purpose and be useful or helpful in some way. If I&#39;m not providing clear value in the form of tips or suggestions or advice, then who cares? Who cares about my travels?&#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;The flip side of the &#34;who cares&#34; feeling is really this: what makes me so important that others would want to read about me? It feels kind of arrogant and conceited to write about myself, as if I&#39;m important enough to warrant the interest of others.&#xA;&#xA;Over the last week or two, I&#39;ve really realized and have been thinking about how I also struggle with making subjective decisions that have no clear upside or downside. Decisions like: what do I write about? What do I say? Should I work on my travel blog, or my personal blog, or a fiction project? Which of my many fiction ideas should I flesh out? What do I do with my leisure time? Oftentimes I wind up just sitting on my phone, or even just doing literally nothing, avoiding making a decision about how to spend my time.&#xA;&#xA;I&#39;d love to hear from anyone that experiences this too and what they do to manage it. It&#39;s a challenge, but I&#39;m working on it intentionally.&#xA;&#xA;Despite all of that, here&#39;s what I&#39;ve done today: I&#39;ve forced myself to make a decision on what to write - clearly, I&#39;m here writing this. I&#39;ve also decided to push through that discomfort of &#34;who cares?&#34; and write a monthly reflection post. My hope is that, by sharing how I journal at a monthly level, I&#39;ll inspire others to live more intentionally and in alignment with their values.&#xA;&#xA;So, what happened in January?&#xA;&#xA;Prior to January, I had been feeling incredibly low on energy and motivation. I felt burned out. It was a challenge to get a couple of focused, productive hours at work, let alone time on personal projects. I felt like I was just floating through the days, having a hard time caring about anything.&#xA;&#xA;Over the holidays, I took 10 days off from work, disconnected from my digital devices, and spent some time alone. It was lovely. So lovely that I decided to make that a part of my weekly routine: disconnecting from digital devices, and finding solitude in nature.&#xA;&#xA;The focus of January, then, was largely rebuilding a foundation of self-care. This looked like:&#xA;&#xA;Meditating for 15 minutes and setting intentions in my journal every morning&#xA;Using a Mood Meter to measure my mood in my journal every morning&#xA;Spending 15-30 minutes on a randomly selected physical activity every day&#xA;Every Sunday, disconnecting and giving myself space to recharge&#xA;Working on a consistent bed time and sleep schedule&#xA;&#xA;What went well?&#xA;&#xA;By the end of January, the change was remarkable: while I wasn&#39;t feeling more physically energetic, there was a substantial improvement in my general sense of well-being and mood.&#xA;&#xA;On top of the self-care habits above, we also moved to San Bernardino, California after spending three months in Las Vegas. As the move day approached, I found myself feeling invigorated. Despite move day being exhausting, I feel much better after moving. My focus at work has substantially improved. I feel like I have more mental energy. I feel more motivated to spend time on creative pursuits.&#xA;&#xA;What didn&#39;t go so well?&#xA;&#xA;I kept my intentions for the month pretty simple and focused, so there&#39;s not a lot that didn&#39;t go well.&#xA;&#xA;I wasn&#39;t physically active every single day. I&#39;m okay with that. I was mindful of my energy levels and, thus, my expectations of myself. I also tried to be honest with myself: am I being lazy, or do I really not have the energy today? I feel like I was pretty fair.&#xA;&#xA;Some days, I would go for a long walk with the dogs. Some days, I would do some high intensity cardio in the house. Other days, I did nothing. And that&#39;s okay.&#xA;&#xA;What did I learn?&#xA;&#xA;In January, I started reading about hyper-fixation and realized it describes me incredibly well. I go through phases where I fixate on learning something new. It consumes my thoughts: I have trouble sleeping, all of my self-care habits disappear, I stop taking care of myself, I forget to shower. It&#39;s incredibly difficult to control.&#xA;&#xA;Knowing that, I put together what I call my Fixation Coping Plan. Basically, it&#39;s a plan to help me cope with my fixation episodes, both during the episode and for recovering afterward.&#xA;&#xA;I also learned, as I started working on writing more consistently, that I struggle with making subjective decisions.&#xA;&#xA;How can I improve next month?&#xA;&#xA;Taking what I&#39;ve learned, in February I want to work on being more decisive. Writing this post is a great example of that, and I need to continue being intentional about that every day.&#xA;&#xA;What are my intentions for February?&#xA;&#xA;After spending all of January building a foundation of self-care, I feel like I&#39;m ready to build on that and take better care of my surroundings and relationships.&#xA;&#xA;That means:&#xA;&#xA;Managing my finances and budgeting more actively&#xA;Being more intentional with my relationships - with my wife, with my family, with my friends&#xA;Keeping the RV in good shape and staying on top of chores and maintenance&#xA;&#xA;In addition, I feel a need for a creative outlet, like I have this pent up energy that needs to be put into something. It&#39;s not a physical energy, it&#39;s more emotional or mental. I need to focus my efforts on something: writing, music, game dev, one of my many various interests.&#xA;&#xA;I&#39;ve decided I&#39;m going to focus on writing. For this blog, for my travel blog, and on a fiction project. Whatever feels right on any given day.&#xA;&#xA;---&#xA;&#xA;Well, that wound up being a bit longer than I thought it would, but there it is: my monthly reflection and intention setting.&#xA;&#xA;Do you journal regularly? Do you experience the challenges with subjective decisions that I do? I&#39;d love to hear your thoughts. Hit me up on Mastodon @nomadave@mindly.social!&#xA;&#xA;#Mindfulness #SelfCare #Journaling #PersonalGrowth]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I struggle with writing consistently. As I begin writing this post, I&#39;m feeling incredibly self-conscious: who cares about my life? Who cares what I did or how I felt in January? Who cares what I&#39;m hoping to accomplish in February?</p>

<p>I feel the same way about writing for my <a href="https://becomingnomads.ca" rel="nofollow">travel blog</a>: like everything I write has to have a clear purpose and be useful or helpful in some way. If I&#39;m not providing clear value in the form of tips or suggestions or advice, then who cares? Who cares about my travels?</p>



<p>The flip side of the “who cares” feeling is really this: what makes me so important that others would want to read about me? It feels kind of arrogant and conceited to write about myself, as if I&#39;m important enough to warrant the interest of others.</p>

<p>Over the last week or two, I&#39;ve really realized and have been thinking about how I also struggle with making subjective decisions that have no clear upside or downside. Decisions like: what do I write about? What do I say? Should I work on my travel blog, or my personal blog, or a fiction project? Which of my many fiction ideas should I flesh out? What do I do with my leisure time? Oftentimes I wind up just sitting on my phone, or even just doing literally nothing, avoiding making a decision about how to spend my time.</p>

<p>I&#39;d <em>love</em> to hear from anyone that experiences this too and what they do to manage it. It&#39;s a challenge, but I&#39;m working on it intentionally.</p>

<p>Despite all of that, here&#39;s what I&#39;ve done today: I&#39;ve forced myself to make a decision on what to write – clearly, I&#39;m here writing this. I&#39;ve also decided to push through that discomfort of “who cares?” and write a monthly reflection post. My hope is that, by sharing how I journal at a monthly level, I&#39;ll inspire others to live more intentionally and in alignment with their values.</p>

<h2 id="so-what-happened-in-january" id="so-what-happened-in-january">So, what happened in January?</h2>

<p>Prior to January, I had been feeling incredibly low on energy and motivation. I felt burned out. It was a challenge to get a couple of focused, productive hours at work, let alone time on personal projects. I felt like I was just floating through the days, having a hard time caring about anything.</p>

<p>Over the holidays, I took 10 days off from work, disconnected from my digital devices, and spent some time alone. It was lovely. So lovely that I decided to make that a part of my weekly routine: disconnecting from digital devices, and finding solitude in nature.</p>

<p>The focus of January, then, was largely rebuilding a foundation of self-care. This looked like:</p>
<ul><li>Meditating for 15 minutes and setting intentions in my journal every morning</li>
<li>Using a Mood Meter to measure my mood in my journal every morning</li>
<li>Spending 15-30 minutes on a randomly selected physical activity every day</li>
<li>Every Sunday, disconnecting and giving myself space to recharge</li>
<li>Working on a consistent bed time and sleep schedule</li></ul>

<h3 id="what-went-well" id="what-went-well">What went well?</h3>

<p>By the end of January, the change was remarkable: while I wasn&#39;t feeling more physically energetic, there was a substantial improvement in my general sense of well-being and mood.</p>

<p>On top of the self-care habits above, we also moved to San Bernardino, California after spending three months in Las Vegas. As the move day approached, I found myself feeling invigorated. Despite move day being exhausting, I feel much better after moving. My focus at work has substantially improved. I feel like I have more mental energy. I feel more motivated to spend time on creative pursuits.</p>

<h3 id="what-didn-t-go-so-well" id="what-didn-t-go-so-well">What didn&#39;t go so well?</h3>

<p>I kept my intentions for the month pretty simple and focused, so there&#39;s not a lot that didn&#39;t go well.</p>

<p>I wasn&#39;t physically active every single day. I&#39;m okay with that. I was mindful of my energy levels and, thus, my expectations of myself. I also tried to be honest with myself: am I being lazy, or do I really not have the energy today? I feel like I was pretty fair.</p>

<p>Some days, I would go for a long walk with the dogs. Some days, I would do some high intensity cardio in the house. Other days, I did nothing. And that&#39;s okay.</p>

<h3 id="what-did-i-learn" id="what-did-i-learn">What did I learn?</h3>

<p>In January, I started reading about hyper-fixation and realized it describes me incredibly well. I go through phases where I fixate on learning something new. It consumes my thoughts: I have trouble sleeping, all of my self-care habits disappear, I stop taking care of myself, I forget to shower. It&#39;s incredibly difficult to control.</p>

<p>Knowing that, I put together what I call my Fixation Coping Plan. Basically, it&#39;s a plan to help me cope with my fixation episodes, both during the episode and for recovering afterward.</p>

<p>I also learned, as I started working on writing more consistently, that I struggle with making subjective decisions.</p>

<h3 id="how-can-i-improve-next-month" id="how-can-i-improve-next-month">How can I improve next month?</h3>

<p>Taking what I&#39;ve learned, in February I want to work on being more decisive. Writing this post is a great example of that, and I need to continue being intentional about that every day.</p>

<h2 id="what-are-my-intentions-for-february" id="what-are-my-intentions-for-february">What are my intentions for February?</h2>

<p>After spending all of January building a foundation of self-care, I feel like I&#39;m ready to build on that and take better care of my surroundings and relationships.</p>

<p>That means:</p>
<ul><li>Managing my finances and budgeting more actively</li>
<li>Being more intentional with my relationships – with my wife, with my family, with my friends</li>
<li>Keeping the RV in good shape and staying on top of chores and maintenance</li></ul>

<p>In addition, I feel a need for a creative outlet, like I have this pent up energy that needs to be put into something. It&#39;s not a physical energy, it&#39;s more emotional or mental. I need to focus my efforts on <em>something</em>: writing, music, game dev, one of my many various interests.</p>

<p>I&#39;ve decided I&#39;m going to focus on writing. For this blog, for my travel blog, and on a fiction project. Whatever feels right on any given day.</p>

<hr/>

<p>Well, that wound up being a bit longer than I thought it would, but there it is: my monthly reflection and intention setting.</p>

<p>Do you journal regularly? Do you experience the challenges with subjective decisions that I do? I&#39;d love to hear your thoughts. Hit me up on Mastodon <a href="https://mindly.social/@nomadave" rel="nofollow"><a href="/@/nomadave@mindly.social" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow">@<span>nomadave@mindly.social</span></a></a>!</p>

<p><a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Mindfulness" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Mindfulness</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:SelfCare" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">SelfCare</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:Journaling" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Journaling</span></a> <a href="https://nomadave.writeas.com/tag:PersonalGrowth" class="hashtag" rel="nofollow"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">PersonalGrowth</span></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://nomadave.writeas.com/reflecting-on-january</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 30 Jan 2023 16:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
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