Let’s be honest: setting up a new planner feels great in theory, but life in Metropolis moves fast. Here at WMOK, we truly get it. Operating as a one-person in-house team means the “regular tasks”—the daily broadcasts, the emails, the immediate deadlines—usually take the wheel. Those “dream list” projects we’re so passionate about often get pushed to the back burner because there simply aren’t enough hours in the day.
If you’re feeling that same squeeze, this isn’t about creating a “perfect” calendar. It’s about building a system that protects your time so those dream projects finally get a seat at the table. Here is a comfortable, low-pressure plan to get your 2026 book ready.
Phase 1: Grounding Your Year
Start with the easy stuff. These are the “anchors” that don’t require much brainpower to fill in, but they make the book feel like yours.
The Holidays: Grab a cup of coffee and flip through, marking the bank holidays and local Metropolis events. It’s nice to see those long weekends waiting for you in the distance.
Birthdays & Roots: Write in the birthdays of the people who keep you grounded.
The “Must-Dos”: Car oil changes, dental appointments, and annual renewals. Getting these out of your head and onto paper immediately lowers your mental “background noise.”
Phase 2: Finding Your Rhythm
When you’re a small team (or a team of one!), your routine is your lifeline. Phase 2 is about marking the repeaters so you don’t have to keep remembering them.
The Daily Non-Negotiables: Whether it’s a morning broadcast or a 2 PM school pickup, block these out. They are the frame of your house.
The Weekly “Check-In”: Give yourself 15 minutes on Monday morning just to look at the week. It’s a small gift to your future self.
Phase 3: Creating “Dream Space”
This is the most important part for those of us juggling a million regular tasks. If we don’t schedule the “dream list,” it doesn’t happen.
The Power Hour: Pick one hour a week—just one—and label it “Dream Project” in a bright color. Treat this hour as if it’s a meeting with the most important person in town.
Color-Coding for Peace: Use a soft color for your routine tasks and a bold, exciting color for your big goals. It helps you see, visually, if your year is becoming all work and no “dream.”
Phase 4: Giving Yourself Grace
The biggest mistake we make is thinking the calendar has to stay pristine.
The Quarterly Reset: Every few months, sit down and see how you’re doing. If you missed a few weeks of your “dream list,” that’s okay. Life happens. Just dust off the book and start again with the next month.
Leave Some White Space: Don’t fill every line. When you’re a one-person show, you need “emergency space” for when things go sideways—and we all know they occasionally do!
Setting up your 2026 book isn’t about being a “productivity machine”—it’s about making sure the things that matter to you don’t get lost in the shuffle of the everyday.
We suggest starting with Federal Holidays:
2026 Federal Holidays
These are the days banks and post offices will be closed:
| Holiday | Date | Day of Week |
| New Year’s Day | January 1 | Thursday |
| Martin Luther King Jr. Day | January 19 | Monday |
| Presidents’ Day | February 16 | Monday |
| Memorial Day | May 25 | Monday |
| Juneteenth | June 19 | Friday |
| Independence Day | July 4 | Saturday (Observed July 3) |
| Labor Day | September 7 | Monday |
| Columbus Day | October 12 | Monday |
| Veterans Day | November 11 | Wednesday |
| Thanksgiving Day | November 26 | Thursday |
| Christmas Day | December 25 | Friday |



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