Start with the sentence. Write “Call Mina,” “Send invoice by Friday,” or “Prep dinner.” Then add the phone, envelope, or plate beside it if the picture makes the entry easier to find later.
Bullet Journal Rapid Logging uses concise entries and a small official symbol vocabulary. The doodles below are optional decorations beside those entries—not official Bullet Journal symbols and not a replacement for clear words.
Quick Start
Draw the noun; write the detail.
A clock and the written time are enough for one appointment.
The same phone works for every person you need to call.
If tomorrow-you cannot recognize it, simplify it.
These pictures should help at a glance without a decoding key.
Playback
Watch one pen route, then copy it beside a note.
Every card opens as a finished reference. Press Draw it, pause between stages, or step backward and forward. Copy it at roughly 35, 40, or 45 mm wide with a 0.5 mm pen.
Small uppercase words such as TIME and NAME are typeset guide labels. They stay still during playback because they explain the writing field; they are not pen strokes to copy.
12 Planning Doodles
Small pictures with a real job on the page.
Press Draw it to see the actual stroke order, then place the paper version beside a concise entry where the icon’s purpose is already clear.
Appointment Clock
Pairs a readable clock with an open rail for the real time.
- Draw the clock face and low crown.
- Add two clear hands.
- Pull the short time rail.
- Finish both ends with upright ticks.
Use it herePut it beside “Dentist” and write 3:30 on the rail.
If it goes wrongIf the hands crowd, shorten the minute hand before redrawing the face.
Selected-Date Calendar
Marks one chosen day beside a written event.
- Close the calendar page and header line.
- Add the two binding rings.
- Draw and check one selected date square.
- Pull the event rail beside the page.
Use it hereAdd it beside “Museum tickets” and write Sat 18 on the rail.
If it goes wrongMake the selected square larger instead of adding a tiny calendar grid.
Deadline Bell
Adds one urgency cue and a place for the due day.
- Shape the bell body in one contour.
- Add the open clapper.
- Draw three restrained alert ticks.
- Pull the short due-date rail.
Use it herePlace it beside “Submit draft” and write Friday on the rail.
If it goes wrongKeep the alert ticks outside the bell; erase none—just stop the next tick earlier.
Pin-to-Flag Trip Mark
Connects a starting place to one clear destination under an itinerary.
- Draw the broad location pin.
- Add its open center.
- Sweep one relaxed route across the page.
- Finish the route with a simple flag.
Use it hereDraw it under “Station → hotel” in a trip plan.
If it goes wrongIf the route bumps the flag, stop the curve before the pole and let the paper gap imply arrival.
Send-By Envelope
Keeps one outgoing item tied to a written deadline.
- Close the envelope outline.
- Fold in the broad flap.
- Draw the send-by rail and its first tick.
- Add the rail’s final date tick.
Use it herePut it beside “Invoice to Kai” and write Jul 14 on the rail.
If it goes wrongIf the flap crosses too low, keep it; move the written detail outside the envelope.
Call-Back Phone
Pairs a familiar handset and return arrow with an open rail for a person’s name.
- Sweep the outer handset curve from top to bottom.
- Turn inward with the short lower end.
- Sweep the inner curve upward, then close only the short upper end.
- Curve a compact arrow back toward the handset.
- Leave a paper gap, then pull the person-name rail.
Use it herePlace it beside a missed-call note and write Mina on the rail.
If it goes wrongKeep a clean paper gap around the arrow; it should point to the handset without touching the phone or name rail.
Two-Person Meeting
Shows two participants sharing one topic line.
- Draw the first round head.
- Add the second at the same height.
- Leave a paper gap, then sweep the two shoulder arcs.
- Pull one shared topic rail beneath them.
Use it herePut it above notes from a one-to-one meeting and write the topic on the rail.
If it goes wrongIf the heads differ, align their bottoms; a little size variation still reads naturally.
Room-and-Broom Mark
Makes a small cleaning action visible without drawing a whole room.
- Draw the short wall and floor corner.
- Pull the diagonal handle to the broom-head boundary.
- Sweep the broad broom head without closing over the handle.
- Add the short band across the bristles.
Use it hereAdd it beside “Bedroom swept” in a weekend reset list.
If it goes wrongIf the broom touches the corner, shorten the handle and keep a paper gap between them.
Work-Block Clock
Brackets one planned stretch of focused work.
- Draw the work clock.
- Set the hands to the starting point.
- Pull the open time-block bracket and rail.
- Finish the range with one end tick.
Use it herePut it beside “Draft intro” and write 10:00–11:00 along the bracket.
If it goes wrongIf the time range is long, extend the writing rail—not the clock.
Shopping-Bag Quantity
Adds one quantity tag beside a clear bag silhouette.
- Draw the bag sides and base, leaving the handle gap open.
- Bridge that top gap with one clean handle.
- Curve the short tag string, then close the tag beside it.
- Add the two sample tally marks.
Use it herePlace it beside “Pick up coffee beans” and draw two tally strokes on the tag for two bags.
If it goes wrongIf the tether crosses into the tag, stop it at the tag edge instead of redrawing the bag.
Meal-and-Prep Mark
Pairs a plate-and-spoon meal cue with one prep-ready checkbox.
- Draw the outer plate.
- Add the quiet inner rim.
- Draw the spoon bowl and pull its straight handle.
- Close one prep checkbox beside it.
- Check the box after prep.
Use it hereAdd it beside “Soup for dinner” and check the square after chopping is done.
If it goes wrongIf the spoon crowds the plate, shorten its handle before shrinking the bowl.
Repeat-Task Arrow
Wraps one open repeat route around a check-ready center.
- Draw the roomy center state circle.
- Sweep the upper repeat arc.
- Add the lower return arc and both arrowheads.
- Check the finished round in the center.
Use it herePut it beside “Weekly desk reset” and check the center after this week’s reset.
If it goes wrongProtect the gap around the center; shorten an arc before letting it touch the circle.
Choose a Cue
Use a doodle only when it shortens the search.
- Use the clock, calendar, or bell when timing is the point.
- Use the envelope or phone when another person needs a follow-up.
- Use the pin, meeting mark, broom, bag, or plate when the object makes a list easier to scan.
- Use the work block or repeat arrow when the action returns and still needs a clear finish.
Keep the written entry concise and legible. The picture is a supporting cue, not a substitute for the time, place, name, quantity, or action.
Before You Repeat It
Did the doodle make the entry easier to find?
A familiar silhouette should not require a legend.
Keep names, times, places, and dates in normal handwriting.
Stacked icons turn a short entry back into a puzzle.
Leave room for the check, dot, or written detail.
If not, copy it at 40 or 45 mm rather than adding microdetail.
These are optional decorations, not official Bullet Journal symbols.
Continue the Pen-Move Library
Separate the next note with one light divider.
The next twelve recipes use leaves, books, sparks, bows, and corners to create a pause without framing the whole page.
Draw 12 dividers and corners for a lighter pageResearch Notes
Source behind the concise-entry approach
All doodle geometry is original to Tiny Systems Co. Bullet Journal’s Rapid Logging guidance informed the emphasis on concise entries and readable marks. The twelve decorative planning doodles on this page are optional additions; they are not official Bullet Journal bullets or signifiers.
