The Quantified Self: January’s Results

Lots of people put their stock in the “quantified self” phenomenon — which, in brief, is the idea that tracking and analyzing various personal measures helps achieve goals.

In late December I developed a template in OneNote that serves as a daily journal. One sheet, one day, no other apps or spreadsheets or tracking tools. The sheet contains a one-sentence, high-level goal for the day, then it includes my unified calendar, a list of tasks, a diet log, an exercise log, a record of financial activity, a “health metrics” section and a place for recording accomplishments or reflections. Each type of information has a specific OneNote tag formatted with a regular comma-delimited pattern; OneNote 2013 lets you pull together a summary page that includes all tags, so I can just cut-and-paste tag sections into Excel for quick-and-easy trend analysis. Pivot tables are your friend.

Upside: Between a Windows 8 desktop, a Windows 8 laptop, a Windows Phone 8, and OneNote for my Android tablet — I can keep the daily list updated from any screen, no problem.

I’ve been supremely diligent throughout January of tracking this information. Some of it will fall into the “interesting but not all that useful” category — e.g., task histories. Others prove much more useful; the appointment section lets me make free-form notes under each tagged calendar item, making it easier to find information later.

The five parts that have proven most illuminating are the daily records for calories, exercise, spending, weight and blood pressure. Here’s what I’ve learned so far:

  • I lost exactly 10 lbs. in the month. Woohoo.
  • I consumed roughly 61,138 calories. Of these, 9.6 percent were enjoyed at breakfast, 41 percent at lunch, 28.4 percent at dinner and 11.8 percent as snacks. Alas, a whopping 9.2 percent of January’s calories came from adult beverages.
  • It appears that 3,100 daily calories marks my “break even” rate — more than that, and I pork up; less than that, and I slim down. This number is consistent with online calculators.
  • My average daily calorie count was 1,972, with a high of 3,215 and a low of 960. Population standard deviation of 609.
  • As I spent more time in the month performing aerobic exercise, my blood pressure — especially the systolic value — improved. I have shifted from consistently measuring as low pre-hypertensive to consistently measuring in the high normal category.
  • Between 12:01 a.m. on January 1 and 11:59 p.m. on January 31, I spent about $80 less than I earned. However, the month was unusual — I had extra income but paid down my credit card and replaced a few big-ticket things, so January’s pattern feels unusual.
  • My spending fell along somewhat surprising categories. I shelled out less on dining out than I would have guessed, but I did incur a whopping $250 just at the gas pump (thank you, GMC Jimmy 4×4). For February, I’m refining my category list, whittling it down to just 12 different buckets of spending.

So. I’m going to keep up with the daily tracking. I’ve found it to be a useful mechanism for keeping front-and-center the stuff I need to do and to prod forethought about my patterns of consumption.

Cuz hey — 10 lbs. in a month isn’t anything to sneeze at.

The Quantified Self: January's Results

Lots of people put their stock in the “quantified self” phenomenon — which, in brief, is the idea that tracking and analyzing various personal measures helps achieve goals.
In late December I developed a template in OneNote that serves as a daily journal. One sheet, one day, no other apps or spreadsheets or tracking tools. The sheet contains a one-sentence, high-level goal for the day, then it includes my unified calendar, a list of tasks, a diet log, an exercise log, a record of financial activity, a “health metrics” section and a place for recording accomplishments or reflections. Each type of information has a specific OneNote tag formatted with a regular comma-delimited pattern; OneNote 2013 lets you pull together a summary page that includes all tags, so I can just cut-and-paste tag sections into Excel for quick-and-easy trend analysis. Pivot tables are your friend.
Upside: Between a Windows 8 desktop, a Windows 8 laptop, a Windows Phone 8, and OneNote for my Android tablet — I can keep the daily list updated from any screen, no problem.
I’ve been supremely diligent throughout January of tracking this information. Some of it will fall into the “interesting but not all that useful” category — e.g., task histories. Others prove much more useful; the appointment section lets me make free-form notes under each tagged calendar item, making it easier to find information later.
The five parts that have proven most illuminating are the daily records for calories, exercise, spending, weight and blood pressure. Here’s what I’ve learned so far:

  • I lost exactly 10 lbs. in the month. Woohoo.
  • I consumed roughly 61,138 calories. Of these, 9.6 percent were enjoyed at breakfast, 41 percent at lunch, 28.4 percent at dinner and 11.8 percent as snacks. Alas, a whopping 9.2 percent of January’s calories came from adult beverages.
  • It appears that 3,100 daily calories marks my “break even” rate — more than that, and I pork up; less than that, and I slim down. This number is consistent with online calculators.
  • My average daily calorie count was 1,972, with a high of 3,215 and a low of 960. Population standard deviation of 609.
  • As I spent more time in the month performing aerobic exercise, my blood pressure — especially the systolic value — improved. I have shifted from consistently measuring as low pre-hypertensive to consistently measuring in the high normal category.
  • Between 12:01 a.m. on January 1 and 11:59 p.m. on January 31, I spent about $80 less than I earned. However, the month was unusual — I had extra income but paid down my credit card and replaced a few big-ticket things, so January’s pattern feels unusual.
  • My spending fell along somewhat surprising categories. I shelled out less on dining out than I would have guessed, but I did incur a whopping $250 just at the gas pump (thank you, GMC Jimmy 4×4). For February, I’m refining my category list, whittling it down to just 12 different buckets of spending.

So. I’m going to keep up with the daily tracking. I’ve found it to be a useful mechanism for keeping front-and-center the stuff I need to do and to prod forethought about my patterns of consumption.
Cuz hey — 10 lbs. in a month isn’t anything to sneeze at.

Rejoice! I’ve Created the Ultimate Daily Tracking System with @MSOneNote

For many long, bitter years I’ve lamented the utter lack of harmony among my various personal-organizational systems. I’ve tried paper. I’ve tried smartphones. I’ve tried an Outlook-only solution. I even tried to put everything into a giant Access database with a Web front-end, only to be stymied by a back-end discontinuity. Never could get any solution to work, though — the stuff I wanted to record, in the way I wanted to record it, in all the different form factors I might want to access it, never seemed to align in satisfactory manner.

Until now, that is.log2

The solution I’ve developed squares the circle that connects data tracking, idea-gathering and journaling into a single front-end solution that synchronizes natively across three screens. I use Microsoft OneNote (although presumably Evernote would work too) with a separate notebook called “Chron” containing a tab called “Daily.” I’ve saved the template shown to the left as the default template for this tab, and my Windows Phone 8 links to the template page (I’ve pinned it, so I can open it up to today’s notes with just a single tap.)

The section contains the things I care about recording, but with only as much detail as I’m interested in gathering. The form includes a “focus” bar, which is simply a phrase or sentence that summarizes something I need to keep top-of-mind; it might be task-oriented or it might just be a song quote to provide inspiration.

The “Today’s Deliverables” list marks all the deadlines I have to get done — I refresh it every morning by scanning my task list in Outlook and picking the that that I need to keep in front of my face.  By design, this list doesn’t sync directly to Outlook; I sometimes include quick tasks or short-term lists here that really don’t warrant the time/effort of adding it to Outlook. I also sometimes schedule myself to do things before their Outlook due date if I know I have the flex to get it done.

The “Schedule” list provides a skeleton of my appointments — both on-calendar and in-the-moment — and beneath each item I can then add my meeting notes and (as needed) create Outlook tasks for anything I need to do as a result of that meeting.

If I did something special worth preserving, it’s listed as a “Significant Accomplishment” — helpful if I wanted to look back over the last few months to see progress on life goals. Many days, this line will be blank, just to preserve its value of highlighting the things that matter.

Then I record data about myself — how many calories I’ve consumed, how much exercising I’ve done and how much money I’ve transacted. Weekly, I record “body metrics,” including regular weigh-ins and blood pressure checks with an “other” category for other health milestones worth documenting. Like my sketchy Vitamin D levels. At the bottom of the list, a section for “Ideas/Reflections” permits free-form recording of ideas or longer journal entries. Consider it a form of diary integration.

One of my biggest peeves with existing third-party life-organization tools is that (a) data often aren’t portable, and (b) you’re at the mercy of the vendor. With my solution, I own my data and don’t need to give private information to a company that may or may not be in operation six months from now.

Eagle-eyed readers may have noticed a “tag” line beneath several of the sections. This little sentence identifies a specific data-recording paradigm. Under “Calorie Counts,” for example, I’ve reminded myself to record today’s date, the meal — breakfast/lunch/dinner/snack — and the meal’s net calories. If I need to add a comment, I can do so. Each piece of information is comma-separated. Then, I can highlight the row of data and use one of OneNote’s tags (I have CTRL+4 hot-keyed as a “calorie count” tag). For example: “1/1/13,breakfast,120,Greek yogurt and coffee with creamer.” Quick and easy to type — something I could do on my phone at the Starbucks counter, even. If it’s easy to record, it’s more likely that it’ll be recorded. Notes are optional. If you’re in line at Panera, how hard is it to tap your log button on the phone and type “1/1/13,lunch,350,Panera” if you’re enjoying a 350-calorie meal? If you can’t log something that succinct ….

But why do it this way, instead of using a third-party service or a spreadsheet or something? Because a uniform method of recording, coupled with OneNote’s heavily customizable internal tags, lets me do a tag search and dump all instances of a specific tab to a summary page. The upshot is that I can just copy/paste the “calorie count” data and dump it into Excel if I want to track/trend/graph my data over time; the uniform mechanism of tracking individual records, separated by commas, permits painless sorting into columns. For example, if I wanted to measure my average daily gross calorie count for all of January, and subtract from it my gross calorie burn from exercise, to arrive at net calories by day, I can just search for the “calorie count” and “exercise record” tags, do a quick copy/paste into Excel, and arrive at the results in less than a minute. No need to try fiddling with MyFitnessPal or Livescape, or a separate mobile version of a spreadsheet; the data’s your own and you can manipulate it how you wish.

So. I now have an electronic solution that allows for daily metrics tracking in one tool, synced over three screens, with a data-collection and tagging infrastructure to permit fairly simple longitudinal analysis of performance. Not bad, eh?

Rejoice! I've Created the Ultimate Daily Tracking System with @MSOneNote

For many long, bitter years I’ve lamented the utter lack of harmony among my various personal-organizational systems. I’ve tried paper. I’ve tried smartphones. I’ve tried an Outlook-only solution. I even tried to put everything into a giant Access database with a Web front-end, only to be stymied by a back-end discontinuity. Never could get any solution to work, though — the stuff I wanted to record, in the way I wanted to record it, in all the different form factors I might want to access it, never seemed to align in satisfactory manner.
Until now, that is.log2

The solution I’ve developed squares the circle that connects data tracking, idea-gathering and journaling into a single front-end solution that synchronizes natively across three screens. I use Microsoft OneNote (although presumably Evernote would work too) with a separate notebook called “Chron” containing a tab called “Daily.” I’ve saved the template shown to the left as the default template for this tab, and my Windows Phone 8 links to the template page (I’ve pinned it, so I can open it up to today’s notes with just a single tap.)

The section contains the things I care about recording, but with only as much detail as I’m interested in gathering. The form includes a “focus” bar, which is simply a phrase or sentence that summarizes something I need to keep top-of-mind; it might be task-oriented or it might just be a song quote to provide inspiration.

The “Today’s Deliverables” list marks all the deadlines I have to get done — I refresh it every morning by scanning my task list in Outlook and picking the that that I need to keep in front of my face.  By design, this list doesn’t sync directly to Outlook; I sometimes include quick tasks or short-term lists here that really don’t warrant the time/effort of adding it to Outlook. I also sometimes schedule myself to do things before their Outlook due date if I know I have the flex to get it done.

The “Schedule” list provides a skeleton of my appointments — both on-calendar and in-the-moment — and beneath each item I can then add my meeting notes and (as needed) create Outlook tasks for anything I need to do as a result of that meeting.

If I did something special worth preserving, it’s listed as a “Significant Accomplishment” — helpful if I wanted to look back over the last few months to see progress on life goals. Many days, this line will be blank, just to preserve its value of highlighting the things that matter.

Then I record data about myself — how many calories I’ve consumed, how much exercising I’ve done and how much money I’ve transacted. Weekly, I record “body metrics,” including regular weigh-ins and blood pressure checks with an “other” category for other health milestones worth documenting. Like my sketchy Vitamin D levels. At the bottom of the list, a section for “Ideas/Reflections” permits free-form recording of ideas or longer journal entries. Consider it a form of diary integration.

One of my biggest peeves with existing third-party life-organization tools is that (a) data often aren’t portable, and (b) you’re at the mercy of the vendor. With my solution, I own my data and don’t need to give private information to a company that may or may not be in operation six months from now.

Eagle-eyed readers may have noticed a “tag” line beneath several of the sections. This little sentence identifies a specific data-recording paradigm. Under “Calorie Counts,” for example, I’ve reminded myself to record today’s date, the meal — breakfast/lunch/dinner/snack — and the meal’s net calories. If I need to add a comment, I can do so. Each piece of information is comma-separated. Then, I can highlight the row of data and use one of OneNote’s tags (I have CTRL+4 hot-keyed as a “calorie count” tag). For example: “1/1/13,breakfast,120,Greek yogurt and coffee with creamer.” Quick and easy to type — something I could do on my phone at the Starbucks counter, even. If it’s easy to record, it’s more likely that it’ll be recorded. Notes are optional. If you’re in line at Panera, how hard is it to tap your log button on the phone and type “1/1/13,lunch,350,Panera” if you’re enjoying a 350-calorie meal? If you can’t log something that succinct ….

But why do it this way, instead of using a third-party service or a spreadsheet or something? Because a uniform method of recording, coupled with OneNote’s heavily customizable internal tags, lets me do a tag search and dump all instances of a specific tab to a summary page. The upshot is that I can just copy/paste the “calorie count” data and dump it into Excel if I want to track/trend/graph my data over time; the uniform mechanism of tracking individual records, separated by commas, permits painless sorting into columns. For example, if I wanted to measure my average daily gross calorie count for all of January, and subtract from it my gross calorie burn from exercise, to arrive at net calories by day, I can just search for the “calorie count” and “exercise record” tags, do a quick copy/paste into Excel, and arrive at the results in less than a minute. No need to try fiddling with MyFitnessPal or Livescape, or a separate mobile version of a spreadsheet; the data’s your own and you can manipulate it how you wish.

So. I now have an electronic solution that allows for daily metrics tracking in one tool, synced over three screens, with a data-collection and tagging infrastructure to permit fairly simple longitudinal analysis of performance. Not bad, eh?