This is the twenty-third in our series of emails called “How I Monk.” In this series, we will be highlighting + celebrating members of the Monk Manual community as they’ve meaningfully applied our tools and resources to find peaceful being and purposeful doing in their everyday lives. If you’d like to be featured in a future “How I Monk,” share your information with us here… #HowIMonk
Name: Jocelyn Ring
Occupation: Brand Strategist and Leadership Coach
Website: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jocelynring/
Location: South Carolina, USA
A bit about who you are and how you spend your days:
Do you have a favorite prompt or section?
“I’m looking forward to” because I can get caught up in the here and now and the urgent tasks of the day. I’ve been guilty of working for long stretches without taking breaks. If I have a reminder of something that I’m looking forward to, it can remind me to make plans for the future AND plan something fun to take a break.
What originally drew you to the Monk Manual?
I'm a recovering overachieving, type A personality who was really searching for a way to figure out how to solve the problem of being vs. doing. I took a field trip to Mepkin Abbey near my home in Charleston, SC and found the book "Business Secrets of the Trappist Monks" by August Turak. That led to some reading about Monks and Mystics, and a Google search brought me to the Monk Manual. I purchased my first set of 90 day planners in 2020!

Practical Monk Manual Tip:
I’ve added a prompt to the “one way I can improve tomorrow.” If I have a problem that I’m noodling on, I’ll write a question that I’d like an answer to in the next day or so. By writing that down at the end of the day, my subconscious goes to work on it while I’m sleeping or in the background during the day.
When you were first getting started, what part of the Monk Manual did you struggle with most?
My perfectionism! The Monk Manual itself is a beautiful journal, and I didn’t want to mess it up or do it wrong. I initially used it as I’ve used every other “planner” with to-do items in order to get started. Once I had some momentum, I started re-reading the “How to” guides, I began to use it in a way that brought beingness to the forefront. I also gave myself permission to fill out the sections I felt drawn to and in the cadence that worked for me (i.e., I use it mostly during the week and skip the weekends).
How has your life changed since using the Monk Manual?
What suggestions would you give to new Monk Manual users?
Just start. Make a mark on the page. There’s no wrong way to do it. And, if you find that you don’t do it consistently, that’s OK. Just pick it up and start again.
If you’d like to be featured in a future “How I Monk,” share your information with us here.