This is good. Especially this:<p>> A review of your “ideal you,” your ideal future, your major goals and desires in life.<p>One 'problem' with many task management methods is that when you slip (which most of us do) there's an aversion to opening up your Wunderlist/Excel/moleskin months later and seeing how far your current self is behind your aspirational self.<p>Task managers are good at atomizing goals into objectives but overlook motivations and outcomes. They lack a <i>'remind me again what's in it for future-me?'</i> feature.<p>I'm currently attempting to code such a feature into my app. By way of example, take learning French as a goal:<p>* Tasks: the usual list of todos. Go to evening classes; Watch 5 hours of TV5Monde each week. etc.<p>* Resources: links to Youtube videos, uploaded language podcasts, communities on the web.<p>* Inspiration: images of French cities you want to visit, scenes from a favorite French film, quotes, a mini journal-entry about that French girl or guy you met that one time. Snippets of things the French-speaking-you will appreciate.<p>* Insights: how much time you're dedicating to the goal, hours already spent and estimated completion date based on your current rate of productivity.<p>So your task manager serves not only as a checklist but also as a control-room (or if you like, moodboard) for that goal. Tasks, tools, motivation and a feedback loop all in one place.