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This journal breaks down your 10-year plan into steps you can take every day to achieve it

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Amazon
  • The BestSelf daily planner is one of the only productivity tools out there designed to help you get where you say you want to be going.
  • Each day in the planner has room designated for lessons and wins, so you can internalize what's working, the progress you've made, and keep moving toward what you really want.
  • For $19, it's a small investment you can make in yourself in the here and now.

Most of us don't look at our current state of life as where we want to be in 10 years. In our careers and personal lives, we all have goals. But there's no guarantee we'll actually realize them if they remain abstract and hard to measure.

If we don't bother to figure out how to make those dreams tangible in the everyday, how serious are we about achieving them? Most of us pick a goal and simply let life happen, or if we search for it actively, can feel wandering and directionless in the day-to-day.

What if, instead, you picked up a tool that enables you to progress at the rate you want to? In so many words, a way to stop feeling so busy, without ever feeling really productive.

That's the mission behind BestSelf Co., a group of self-described "human performance junkies." The founders researched the most successful, high-performing people in the world, attended conferences, read books, and interviewed successful entrepreneurs to figure out how some people achieve so much in comparison to others.

What they learned is that the difference between success and lost complacency is an ability to plan, effectively execute, and track progress by creating a daily ritual for success. Which is why they made a journal that physically mixed all the optimization tools they had discovered to create one simple, hyper-effective tool for self-progress.

Planners usually structure your life in a sanitized way. They help you schedule your day without much integration of long- or short-term goals. Meaning you might end the day having crossed off everything, but not with any clarity on what you did that really mattered.

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Long-term goals are broken up into bite-size, tangible visuals. Amazon

With the journal they came up with, your "what mattered" is outlined and clear for you to visualize your progress, making it easier to see what still has yet to be done as well as how far you've come. Every section of your life is brought into focus with actionable steps. You have a space to set weekly milestones, and the "daily" portion is cut up into 30-minute segments (think how Benjamin Franklin structured his) and allows you to optimize your entire day within the framework of your goals.

Using proven positivity psychology fundamentals, they also created space in the morning and night to cultivate a habit of gratitude. You can feel happy because you're moving forward, meaningfully, and also acknowledge all that you have to be grateful for. 

Each day has room designated for lessons and wins, so you can internalize what's working, the progress you've made, and keep moving toward what you really want, so it doesn't slip away by you never directly attacking it head-on.

If you're looking for a way to realize your most far-fetched potential, or simply want an aid to getting you as close to those long-term goals as you can possibly get, the BestSelf daily planner is one of the only things out there designed to help you get where you say you want to be going.

Buy the BestSelf Co. Day Planner on BestSelf for $19.

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Disclosure: This post is brought to you by the Insider Reviews team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners. We frequently receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising sales team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at reviews@businessinsider.com.

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