Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Generate an energy-optimized, time-blocked daily plan based on circadian rhythm research and GTD principles
Generate an energy-optimized, time-blocked daily plan based on circadian rhythm research and GTD principles
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Then review README.md for any prerequisites, environment setup, or post-install checks. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Generate a clean, actionable hour-by-hour plan for the day based on priorities, energy patterns, and constraints.
Problem with "just asking": You get a different plan each time. No consistency, no memory of what works, no optimization over time. This skill provides: Consistent methodology - Same decision framework every day (Top 3 priorities, energy windows, buffer rules) Energy-aware scheduling - Automatically matches high-cognitive tasks to your peak hours Constraint-aware - Respects your existing calendar, energy patterns, personal boundaries Learning memory - Can track what scheduling patterns work best for you over time Evening reflection built-in - Forces accountability on what actually got done You can replicate this by writing the same detailed prompt every day, manually checking your calendar, remembering your energy patterns, and tracking completion rates. Or use this skill in 2 minutes.
/plan-my-day [optional: YYYY-MM-DD for future date] With custom energy profile: /plan-my-day --peak 9-11,14-16 --recovery 13-14
Circadian optimization - Cognitive performance peaks ~2-3 hours after waking (Roenneberg, 2012) Ultradian rhythms - Work in 90-minute blocks with 15-20 minute breaks (Ericsson, 1993) Decision fatigue prevention - Schedule high-stakes decisions before 3pm (Kahneman, 2011) Implementation intentions - Specific time+task combinations increase completion by 2-3Γ (Gollwitzer, 1999)
Peak Performance (Morning): 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM Deep work, strategic thinking, complex problem-solving Highest cognitive capacity Schedule your #1 priority here Secondary Peak (Afternoon): 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM Focused work, meetings with decisions, creative work Still high capacity but slightly lower than morning Administrative (Late Afternoon): 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM Email processing, light tasks, 1-on-1s, planning Lower energy, avoid complex decisions Recovery Blocks: 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM, 6:00 PM+ Meals, exercise, walks, recharge Non-negotiable for sustained performance Wind Down (Evening): After 7:00 PM Reflection, reading, light planning for tomorrow No high-cognitive work
Check existing calendar events Review yesterday's incomplete tasks Identify any fixed commitments or deadlines Note current project priorities
Ask for each potential priority: Impact: Does this move a key metric or deadline? Urgency: Must it happen today? Effort: Can I complete it in available time? Filter: Pick the 3 with highest impactΓurgency score
Sequencing logic: Place fixed commitments (meetings, calls) first Assign Priority #1 to longest peak energy block Assign Priority #2 to secondary peak or next available Assign Priority #3 to remaining focused time Add 20-minute buffers between major blocks Schedule admin work (email, Slack) in low-energy windows Protect breaks and meals (non-negotiable) Buffer rule: Only schedule 80% of available time
Personal boundaries: No work before 8am or after 7pm (customize) Meeting limits: Max 4 hours of meetings per day Focus blocks: Minimum 90 minutes for deep work (no interruptions) Break enforcement: 15-minute break every 90 minutes
User: Marketing manager at B2B SaaS company, struggled with reactive days Before using skill: Average day: 6-8 hours in meetings, 2 hours of "work" squeezed in Top priorities rarely completed Constant email/Slack interruptions 15% weekly goal completion rate Felt productive but accomplished little After implementing plan-my-day: Used skill every morning (2-3 minutes to generate plan) Protected 9-11am deep work block (calendar marked "Focus Time") Set clear Top 3 priorities each day Added evening check-ins to track completion Results after 8 weeks: 74% weekly goal completion rate (+59 points) Meetings reduced from 6-8 hrs/day to 3-4 hrs/day Deep work blocks protected 4 days/week (vs 0 before) Self-reported energy levels: 8.2/10 (vs 4.1/10 before) Team feedback: "You're more present and decisive" Key insight: "The daily plan gave me permission to say no. If it wasn't in my Top 3, I deferred it. That one change unlocked everything."
/plan-my-day Balanced energy windows 8-hour workday assumption 20% buffer time
/plan-my-day --mode high-output 10-hour workday More aggressive scheduling 10% buffer time Best for: Launch weeks, crunch periods
/plan-my-day --mode deep-work Maximum uninterrupted blocks Minimal meetings 30% buffer time Best for: Individual contributors, creators
/plan-my-day --mode coordination Meeting-first scheduling Work blocks fit around commitments 25% buffer time Best for: Managers, executives, client-facing roles
# Copy skill to your skills directory cp -r plan-my-day $HOME/.openclaw/skills/ # Verify installation /plan-my-day --version No dependencies required - Pure planning logic.
Google Calendar sync - Auto-import existing events Completion tracking - Analytics on your planning accuracy over time Energy pattern learning - Adapts to when you actually perform best Team coordination - Sync focus blocks across teams
Run it FIRST thing - Before checking email or Slack. Set the day, don't react to it. Protect Peak hours - Block 9-11am as "Focus Time" on your calendar. Decline meetings here. Track completion rates - Use evening check-in data to improve your estimations Adjust energy windows - Default is 9-11am peak, but if you're different, customize it Combine with "shutdown ritual" - Evening check-in + tomorrow's prep = mental closure Don't over-schedule - If plan shows 7 hours of tasks for 8-hour day, you're on track
β Planning too much - If you schedule 100% of your time, you'll fail. Always leave 20% buffer. β Ignoring energy windows - Putting hard thinking work at 4pm sets you up for failure. β Skipping breaks - 90-minute focus blocks REQUIRE 15-minute breaks or performance drops. β No evening reflection - Without check-ins, you can't improve your planning accuracy. β Changing Top 3 mid-day - Unless genuinely urgent, stick to morning priorities.
A good daily plan has: Clear Top 3 priorities with measurable outcomes #1 priority scheduled in peak energy window 20% buffer time (not every minute scheduled) Breaks scheduled every 90 minutes Protected lunch break (minimum 30 minutes) Evening check-in template included No work scheduled after 7pm (personal time protected)
Issues or suggestions? Provide: Your typical day structure (work hours, meeting load) Top 3 priorities example Energy pattern (when you're most focused) What's not working in current output Built on circadian rhythm research (Roenneberg), deliberate practice principles (Ericsson), and GTD methodology (Allen). Plan your day in 2 minutes. Execute with focus. Win consistently.
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