Designed to be used your way
This is a part journal, part workbook—something you’ll want to keep.
✨ Add photos or clippings like a memory keeper ✨ Print a few pages on thicker paper for markers or paints ✨ Use washi tape to color-code months or sections ✨ Add in pocket dividers or tabs to keep things organized ✨ Print 1 quarter at a time to reduce binder bulk
This is a tool. Customize it as needed.
Who is this for?
Paper planner lovers who don’t get what they need from Google
Christians craving more than productivity hacks—they want purpose
Women who love journaling, vision boards, and spiritual growth tools
If goal setting lights you up, but you also need help staying on track
This is for the gal who wants margin, intention, and memory all in one place
You may be wondering…
Q: How many pages is this?
A: ~200 total pages for the full year.
Q: What size binder should I use?
A: If printing double-sided, use a 1.5” or 2” binder. I suggest printing one quarter at a time.
Q: Will this work if I’m not super religious?
A: This is a faith-based planner with prompts that reflect a Christian worldview. If that resonates, you’ll love it. If not, it’s still a great planner.
Q: Can I use this digitally?
A: It’s designed to be doodled in, washi-taped, and saved as a keepsake- it’s not meant for digital.
Why I made this:
As obsessed as I am with my Google Calendar—live and die girly over here—there’s just something about pencil to paper that slows me down and connects me to the moment.
I wanted a space to:
Plan and goals and rhythms in a practical way
Remember what I was walking through during different seasons
Add photos, tickets, scraps—little mementos of real life
I’ve always loved bullet journals but hated having to draw every spread. That’s a fast track to burnout.
I also couldn’t find anything that combined faith, goal-setting, reflection, and real life planning in one place—and definitely not in a size big enough to actually write and breathe in. So I made my own.
This is what I wish existed: a space for me to dream, sketch things out, stay organized, and still leave room for the messy middle.

