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Most people wait until December to realise the year did not go the way they hoped. By then, drift has quietly hardened into debt, burnout or distance from the people and projects that matter. The Upgrade Day offers a humane alternative: a quarterly life review that catches small deviations before they become crises and turns the year into four manageable chapters.
This is a practical guide to building your own personal operating system. Across ten concise chapters, you will learn how to run a simple net worth check, design a realistic habit scorecard, conduct a ruthless yet freeing calendar declutter, and plan meaningful rest, learning and relationships. Instead of tracking everything every day, you will learn what to measure, what to stop worrying about, and what to deliberately do more of for just ninety days at a time.
Designed for thoughtful professionals, creatives, carers and anyone balancing multiple roles, the book avoids jargon and grand promises. It gives you prompts, scripts and examples to run your own goal setting ritual four times a year, supported by light-touch tools for fitness progress metrics, relationship check in conversations and skills roadmap planning. The focus is cadence, not motivation: a repeatable rhythm that works even when you feel tired or uninspired. By the end, you will have a clear, customisable Upgrade Day you can trust to keep your money, health and priorities gently but firmly on track.

The Upgrade Day

SKU: 9789376556021
$29.99 Regular Price
$22.35Sale Price
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  • Talia Wrenford is fascinated by the quiet systems that shape everyday life. Over many years, while juggling work, family and personal projects, she found that dramatic resolutions rarely lasted, but small, well-timed resets did. The Upgrade Day grew out of scribbled checklists on scrap paper, refined through dozens of quarters into a simple ritual she could trust. Talia writes for people who are ambitious about their lives but allergic to performative hustle. She believes that progress should feel like stewardship, not self-punishment, and that numbers are useful only when they serve humane priorities. Her approach is conversational and practical, rooted in lived trial and error rather than grand theories. Growing up with stories of old quarter days and seasonal festivals, she has always been drawn to the idea that the year comes in chapters, not just one long blur. That sensibility threads through this book: a respect for rhythm, for rest, and for the relief of saying, "I do not have to fix everything today. I just have to steer the next quarter a little better."

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