Bullet Journaling for Beginners
By notebooksphangel / March 19, 2026 / No Comments / Discussion
You’ve seen the spreads on Pinterest β the hand-lettered headers, color-coded trackers, and satisfying daily logs. You want to start one. But how do you fit Undas, your town fiesta, or the school calendar into a system that wasn’t designed for Philippine life? This guide walks you through building a bullet journal around the rhythms and realities of everyday life here.
- What Is Bullet Journaling β and Why It Fits Filipino Life
- Supplies You Need (and Where to Buy Them in PH)
- The 4 Core Collections Every Bujo Needs
- Building Your Filipino Calendar System
- PH Public Holidays 2025 β Ready to Copy Into Your Bujo
- DepEd School Calendar: For Students and Parent Planners
- The Twice-Monthly Budget Log β A Filipino Essential
- Filipino-Specific Collections to Add
- Writing Your Daily Log
- Making It Beautiful Without the Pressure
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Is Bullet Journaling β and Why It Fits Filipino Life
Bullet journaling (bujo) is an analog organization system invented by designer Ryder Carroll. A single blank or dotted notebook replaces your planner, to-do list, diary, and habit tracker β all in one flexible system. There are no pre-printed layouts telling you what to do or when. You decide what goes on every page.
The original method has four structural building blocks β Index, Future Log, Monthly Log, and Daily Log β and everything else (the beautiful trackers, the themed collections, the decorated spreads) is optional and built on top of this foundation. You can be as minimal or as creative as you want.
- Two or more jobs / sideline income
- Shared household finances
- Extended family obligations
- DepEd + CHED academic calendars
- 18+ public holidays per year
- Typhoon season school suspensions
- Multiple income trackers per month
- Loan and group savings tracker
- Travel gifts and holiday gift planner
- Academic semester spreads
- All holidays pre-loaded in Future Log
- Built-in suspension day log
The local bujo community is active and welcoming β search #bujoph on Instagram and you’ll find thousands of creators who have built systems that actually reflect Philippine life. This guide gives you the foundation to start your own.
Supplies You Need (and Where to Buy Them in PH)
You don’t need expensive imports to start. Local options from notebooks.ph, National Bookstore, and Shopee cover everything. Here are the three levels of commitment:
- Dotted notebook β any brand
- Black ballpen β Pilot G-2 or BIC
- Ruler β for straight lines
- Lapis β for drafts
- Micron / Staedtler pen
- 2β3 colored brush pens
- Washi tape
- Page flags / sticky tabs
- White gel pen
- Tombow dual brush pens
- Mildliner / watercolor
- Stickers at stamps
- Premium A5 notebook
- Stencil set
Choosing the Right Notebook
For bullet journaling, the dot grid (dotted) format is the standard choice. The dots provide just enough structure to guide your lines and boxes without being visible in photos. Blank and lined notebooks also work, but dotted is what most bujo enthusiasts use.
Paper weight matters more than brand. A notebook with at least 80gsm paper resists bleed-through from most ballpens and gel pens. If you plan to use brush pens or markers, go for 100gsm. Our notebooks at notebooks.ph come in both weights β check product pages to match your pen choice.
| Format | Best for | Verdict |
|---|---|---|
| Dot Grid (Dotted) | Layouts, grids, drawing β everything | β Pinakamainam |
| Blank / Plain | Artistic spreads and drawing | Great for artists |
| Lined / Ruled | Heavy writing, neat text lines | Works, but less flexible |
| Grid / Graph | Technical layouts at tables | Good alternative to dotted |
The 4 Core Collections Every Bujo Needs
Before the pretty spreads comes the structure. The original Bullet Journal method has four core collections. These are the skeleton β everything else is built on top of them.
Reserve the first 4β6 pages for your Index. As you add content to your notebook, write the topic and page number here. This is how you find things later β your table of contents. Entry format: PH Holidays 2025 …….. 4 Β orΒ September Daily Log …….. 28.
Pages 7β10. Divide a spread into 6 sections, one per month for the next 6 months. Write important dates here β exams, birthdays, fiesta dates, loan due dates, travel. When a month arrives, transfer its items to the Monthly Log. This is your “parking lot” for future plans.
At the start of each new month, create a 2-page spread. Left page: a simple calendar listing 1β31 with the day abbreviation. Right page: your task list β the big things you must accomplish this month. Transfer unfinished tasks from last month and bring in events from your Future Log.
This is where daily life happens. Write today’s date as a header, then use bullet points for tasks, dashes for notes, and circles for events. Don’t plan ahead β just capture what comes up throughout the day. Incomplete tasks get migrated to tomorrow or back to the monthly task list.
Something you need to do
A date-specific occurrence
Ideas, observations, thoughts
Completed task
Moved to next day or month
Moved to Future Log
High-importance item
Good idea worth saving
Tip: Customize these symbols freely. Many Filipino bujo users add β± for expenses, β‘ for self-care, β for calls needed, and β for forms to submit.
Building Your Filipino Calendar System
The biggest difference between a generic bujo and one built for Philippine life is how you handle time. Life here runs on multiple overlapping calendars β the civil year, the DepEd school calendar, the university semester, the Catholic liturgical cycle, and the regional rotation of fiestas and local holidays that shapes when your community works, rests, and celebrates.
Here’s a four-layer system that captures all of it:
Draw a 12-month grid across 2 pages at the very front of your notebook. Mark all regular public holidays in red, your personal and family events in blue, and school-related dates in green. This bird’s-eye view of the whole year becomes the most-referenced spread in your entire bujo.
If you or your children are in school, build a semester spread instead of (or in addition to) a six-month Future Log. DepEd has been transitioning to an AugustβMay school year aligned with the ASEAN region. Divide your log into quarters: Q1 AugβOct, Q2 NovβJan, Q3 FebβApr. Deadlines and exam weeks align much better to this structure than to calendar months.
Mark paydays prominently on every monthly log. Most Filipino salaried workers receive pay on the 15th and last day of the month β treat these dates with the same visual weight as holidays. Your spending capacity and savings timeline are anchored to these two dates, so your bujo planning should be too.
Every Philippine city and barangay has its own fiesta date, foundation day, and local non-working holidays that never appear on the national list. Dedicate one page in your Collections section to listing your region’s key local dates. This is especially important for freelancers and business owners who need to anticipate slow periods around local celebrations.
PH Public Holidays 2025 β Ready to Copy Into Your Bujo
Copy these into your Future Log or Annual Overview. They affect work deadlines, school schedules, bank transactions, and family plans β worth marking every single one.
| Date | Holiday | Type | Bujo Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1 | New Year’s Day | R | Banks closed; plan your New Year’s Eve budget |
| Apr 9 | Araw ng Kagitingan (Day of Valor) | R | Possible long weekend; book travel early |
| Apr 17β18 | Maundy Thursday at Good Friday | R | Holy Week β book travel early! Budget pasalubong costs |
| Apr 19 | Black Saturday | SP | No-pay if absent; working = higher pay |
| May 1 | Labor Day / Araw ng Manggagawa (Labor Day) | R | Near May 15 payday; plan your budget early |
| Jun 12 | Independence Day / Araw ng Kalayaan (Independence Day) | R | Near school opening; a busy budget month |
| Aug 21 | Ninoy Aquino Day | R | Mid-school-year; plan a rest day |
| Aug 25 | National Heroes Day | R | Long weekend β log your travel plans |
| Nov 1β2 | All Saints’ and All Souls’ Day (Undas) | R | Plan which cemetery to visit + transport |
| Nov 30 | Bonifacio Day | R | Start of Pasko season; set up your Noche Buena planner |
| Dec 8 | Feast of the Immaculate Conception | SP | Set up your Simbang Gabi tracker |
| Dec 24β25 | Christmas Eve and Christmas Day | R | Noche Buena plan, gift list, grocery prep |
| Dec 30 | Rizal Day | R | Annual reflection log β year-end review |
| Dec 31 | New Year’s Eve | SP | Media Noche budget + set up new bujo for next year |
“The Philippines has more public holidays than most countries in Asia. In your bujo, each one is not just a day off β it’s a checkpoint for your budget, your family, and the shape of your whole year.”
DepEd School Calendar: For Students and Parent Planners
Philippine basic education has been shifting its calendar β DepEd has been moving toward an AugustβMay school year to align with ASEAN neighbors. Regardless of which schedule your school follows, your bujo needs a dedicated Academic Semester Spread.
- Vertical timeline of all weeks
- Term start and end dates
- Color-code exam weeks (Prelim, Midterm, Finals)
- Suspension days when announced
- Card-giving and parent-teacher conference
- School events: sportsfest, recognition day
- List of subjects + teacher names
- Major requirements per subject
- Grade tracker (target vs. actual)
- Deadline list for projects and reports
- Study group schedule
- School fee payment dates
Key School Dates to Pre-Load into Your Future Log
The Twice-Monthly Budget Log β A Filipino Essential
Most Filipino salaried employees are paid on the 15th and the last day of the month. This semi-monthly rhythm is completely different from the weekly or bi-weekly pay cycles that most English-language bujo guides assume. Your budget spreads need to be built around these two pay cycles β each with its own income and expense structure.
π‘ Add a small daily expense log below each period. Seeing a running total throughout the week is the fastest way to catch overspending before the next payday hits.
The Utang and Paluwagan Tracker
Whether it’s money borrowed from a friend, group savings contributions, or installment payments on a gadget, these obligations need their own dedicated page in your bujo. A simple table prevents the awkward forgetfulness that can strain relationships.
| Who / What | Amount | Due Date | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Older sister β borrowed amount | β±500 | Oct 15 | PENDING |
| Group savings (paluwagan) β Sep share | β±1,000 | Sep 30 | PAID β |
| Shopee installment (phone) | β±850/mo | Every 5th | RECURRING |
Filipino-Specific Collections to Add
Collections are themed pages dedicated to a single topic. Beyond the usual book lists and movie trackers, here are collections built specifically around Filipino life:
List every person you buy gifts or pasalubong for, what you gave last year, their size or preference, and your budget ceiling. No more last-minute scrambling in December.
Track food to prepare, guests to invite, tasks to delegate (cooking, decorating, shopping), and the full budget breakdown. Works for town fiestas and family gatherings alike.
For OFW families β track scheduled call times across time zones, remittance dates, visa renewal deadlines, and balikbayan box wishlists from family.
Weekly meal planning Filipino-style: assign dishes per day, list ingredients, and track your grocery budget. Reduces food waste and impulse spending.
Track your attendance for the 9-night Simbang Gabi (Dec 16β24). Add notes per night β the church visited, your intentions, even the bibingka or puto bumbong you had after. A meaningful reflection collection.
For those with online selling, food business, or freelance work β track orders, customers, expenses, and monthly income. Also useful for resellers and gig economy workers.
Especially during 11.11 or 12.12 sales β log order numbers, prices, expected delivery, and whether items arrived in good condition. Helps with dispute claims and controls impulse buying.
Track medication schedules for elderly family members, PhilHealth contribution records, doctor’s appointment dates, and reimbursement deadlines.
Writing Your Daily Log
A common question from Filipino beginners: “Should I write in English or Filipino?” The honest answer: whichever feels most natural β and for most of us, that’s a mix of both. Your bujo is a personal tool. Write in whatever language helps you think and plan most clearly.
Useful Shorthand to Speed Up Your Daily Log
| Shorthand | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ASAP / AGAD | Urgent β do immediately |
| TBD / DEPENDE | Not yet confirmed |
| β± [halaga] | Expense or budget note |
| β / TAWAG | Need to call someone |
| !!! / HUWAG KALIMUTAN | Critical reminder β do not forget |
| W/ KASAMA | With / together with someone |
| LW / LAST WEEK | Task carried over from last week |
Making It Beautiful Without the Pressure
The bujo aesthetic trap is real. You see a perfectly lettered spread on Instagram and suddenly your own notebook feels inadequate. Let’s reset: function first, beauty second. A bujo you actually use will always beat a beautiful one you never open.
That said, a bujo you enjoy looking at is one you’ll actually open. Here’s a practical approach to aesthetics that won’t paralyze you:
Choose 2β3 colors per month and use only those. Filipino bujo creators often use earth tones (brown, terracotta, cream) or tropical palettes (teal, mango yellow, coral). Consistency looks intentional even when your lettering isn’t perfect.
You don’t need calligraphy. Just write headers in ALL CAPS with a thicker pen, and use normal handwriting for the body. This single change makes any bujo look ten times more polished.
A strip of washi tape along the top or side of a page instantly makes it look intentional. Affordable packs are widely available on Shopee. Use them for borders, dividers, and to cover mistakes.
Simple flat doodles are all you need. Try: rice stalks, a jeepney outline, woven mat patterns, Philippine script characters, sampaguita flowers, or a Philippine map outline. These give your bujo a distinctly Filipino identity without requiring real artistic skill.
Allow yourself a maximum of 5 minutes of decorating before writing content. Set a timer. The constraint forces decisive aesthetic choices and ensures the page gets filled with useful content β not just beautiful, but actually used.
- Instagram: #bujoph, #pilipinobulletjournalist, #bujofilipino
- Facebook: “Bullet Journal Philippines” Facebook group
- TikTok: Search “bujo philippines” for video tutorials and setup walkthroughs
- YouTube: Many Filipino creators post setup videos, especially for school and academic calendars
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The most functional bullet journals have zero drawings. Straight lines, simple boxes, and clean handwriting are all you need. The drawings and doodles are entirely optional β they make pages more enjoyable to look at, but they do not make the system work. Start plain. Add decoration only when you’re already comfortable with the underlying structure.
For beginners, any dotted notebook with 80gsm+ paper works. Our notebooks at notebooks.ph are designed for local conditions β the humidity here affects paper quality over time, so we use paper that holds up well. For premium bujo, Leuchtturm1917 is available locally but comes with an import price. Our in-house notebooks, along with Midori MD and Kokuyo, are popular mid-tier choices that perform beautifully.
Create a “Suspension Log” page in your bujo. Every time classes are cancelled β typhoon, extreme heat, or other reasons β log the date, reason, and any make-up activities or requirements issued in response. This helps students and parents track what needs to be covered when classes resume. Add a β symbol in your daily log whenever a suspension is announced.
None. The bullet journal system was designed to be adapted. Ryder Carroll himself says the method should evolve with the person using it. If a collection doesn’t work for you, stop using it. If a symbol doesn’t make sense in your context, change it. Filipino life has specific rhythms and obligations β your bujo should serve your life β not the other way around.
Four options: (1) Cover it with washi tape and start fresh on that space. (2) Draw a simple geometric pattern (crosshatch, dots) over the mistake as decoration. (3) Write “VOID” across it in bold and move on β it’s part of the process. (4) Use a white gel pen for small errors. Remember: a bujo is a personal tool, not a portfolio. Nobody but you sees the mistakes, and even those tell a story.
Yes, and many Filipinos do β especially using GoodNotes, Notion, or a plain Notes app. But there is neuroscience behind the pen-and-paper method: physical writing encodes information more deeply into memory and removes the distraction of notifications. If you have a notebook, try the physical method for 30 days first. If it genuinely doesn’t suit your lifestyle, digital bujo is a perfectly valid alternative β some people even use both (digital for planning, physical for reflection).
Dotted, blank, at grid notebooks β all designed for Filipino writers and local conditions. Available in A5, B5, and pocket sizes with 80gsm and 100gsm options.
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