This is Kate's upcoming to-do list that she keeps in Microsoft Excel. What you can see is she's also organized things by start date. Few examples I love here. Over the summer, Kate's going to throw a baby shower for her best friend. That is something she can't just throw together at the last minute. She needs lead time to actually pull that off. So you can see in the month of June, she actually has plan baby shower for her friend Cindy, or abbreviated as Cyn in this example. If you look further down her example, she actually says the date that it has to happen. This is Kate giving herself time to throw her best friend a fabulous baby shower. Few other things I love here. If you look further down into the month of July, Kate has a list of different books she wants to read in preparation for the upcoming school year. For example, read Love and Logic, read First Days of School. Kate doesn't want to do that in May or even in June. She's too busy wrapping up the school year. However, she doesn't want to forget these recommendations, so she plans to do that in July, when she has more mind space to actually pull it off. Last thing I want to point out here. Kate has a lot of great personal examples on here. So if you look at the month of May for example, she says, buy binders. She needs to organize her grad school material. She noticed in about January it was getting out of control. She did not have much time to actually pull it off, get it all organized, make it useful for her to go back to, but in May she knew she would. She's going to buy those two binders. She's going to get all her grad school stuff organized, so she can look at it through the course of the summer, and it can be useful for her for the upcoming year.