how to track weekly habits
how to track weekly habits
Pick a handful of habits that matter for the week ahead and give each a clear trigger. I start every Sunday night by opening the habit board on my phone, tapping the + button, and typing a short name—“30‑min jog,” “no‑sugar coffee,” “read chapter.” I drop them into the “Health” and “Learning” categories so the colors pop on the grid.
When a habit repeats on specific days, I set the recurrence pattern right there. The app lets me choose “Mon‑Fri” or a custom rotation like “Mon, Wed, Fri.” That way the card only shows up on the days I actually plan to do it, keeping the dashboard uncluttered.
For anything that needs focus—like my pomodoro‑style study sessions—I switch the habit type to Timer. I hit “Start” and let the built‑in timer run its 25‑minute cycle. When the timer finishes, the habit auto‑marks as done. No extra tapping, no missed check‑ins because I got distracted.
Streaks are a nice visual cue, but I don’t let them drive anxiety. If a day looks impossible, I use a freeze. One tap protects the streak without forcing a completion. I keep an eye on the remaining freezes in the habit settings so I don’t overuse them.
Every evening I glance at the habit cards and tap any that feel off‑track. The app instantly shows a tiny “+” next to the habit, letting me add a quick note—“felt sore, will swap jog for stretch tomorrow.” Those notes live alongside my journal entry for the day, so later I can search for “sore” and see the pattern.
Speaking of the journal, I open the notebook icon on the dashboard and write a short reflection. I pick a mood emoji, answer the prompt about the week’s biggest win, and let the AI tag the entry. Those tags later help me pull up all entries that mention “energy” when I’m tweaking my routine.
If I’m feeling overwhelmed, I tap the brain icon for Crisis Mode. The screen collapses to three micro‑activities: a five‑minute breathing exercise, a quick vent‑journal, and a tiny win like “make the bed.” It’s a reminder that even a sliver of progress counts, and it removes the pressure of a full streak reset.
Accountability works better with a buddy. I created a small Squad in the Social tab, invited a friend, and we both see each other’s daily completion percentages. A quick chat in the squad channel lets us celebrate wins or nudge each other when a habit slides.
Reading a book is another habit I track, but I keep it separate in the Reading tab. I log the current page, set a progress goal for the week, and the app shows a tiny progress bar on the dashboard. Seeing “15 % done” nudges me to read a few pages each night without turning the habit into a separate entry on the main board.
When I notice a habit consistently stalls, I dive into the Analytics tab. The charts reveal that my “no‑sugar coffee” habit drops on Wednesdays. I cross‑reference the journal entries for those days and discover I’m usually rushing to meetings. I adjust the recurrence to skip Wednesdays, and the streak steadies.
Finally, I back up everything every month via the Export button in Settings. A JSON file lands in my cloud storage, so if I ever switch phones, I can import all habits, journal notes, and squad data with a single tap. No lost streaks, no missing reflections.
And that’s how I keep weekly habits visible, flexible, and accountable—without turning my phone into a chore‑list prison.
Done reading?
Now go build the habit.
Trider tracks streaks, has a built-in focus timer, and lets you freeze days when life hits. No premium paywall for core features.