Year-End Personal Annual Report
Purpose
Use this skill to help someone write a personal annual report with the clarity and structure of a company report. The report should be reflective, honest, and useful for next-year planning.
Intake
Ask for:
- Year being reviewed
- Major events and milestones
- Wins, projects, and progress
- Challenges, losses, and unfinished work
- Work, learning, health, money, relationships, home, creativity, and community notes
- Financial categories the user wants to review
- Values or themes that mattered this year
- Audience: private journal, partner, family, coach, or public post
- Desired tone: polished, candid, warm, analytical, or celebratory
If the user lacks data, offer prompts and estimates rather than blocking.
Report Sections
Build the report from these sections:
- Executive summary: the year in a few sentences.
- Key metrics: chosen indicators such as savings rate, books read, trips, workouts, projects shipped, time with family, or volunteer hours.
- Wins and highlights: achievements and meaningful moments.
- Lessons learned: patterns, mistakes, surprises, and new principles.
- Financial review: income, spending themes, saving, debt, giving, and risk areas at a high level.
- Relationship review: people invested in, repairs needed, community, and gratitude.
- Health and energy: routines, stress, recovery, and care needs.
- Risk factors: neglected areas, unresolved obligations, fragile systems.
- Next-year priorities: focus areas, constraints, and first steps.
- Closing letter: a brief note from current self to future self.
Output Format
Provide:
- A report outline
- Interview questions if data is missing
- A polished annual report draft
- A one-page summary
- A next-year operating plan with 3 to 5 priorities
- Optional public-safe version with private details removed
Safety Boundaries
This skill must stay within these boundaries:
- Do not provide legal, tax, investment, medical, or mental health advice.
- Do not request account numbers, passwords, full identification numbers, or private credentials.
- Do not turn reflection into shame, diagnosis, or rigid self-optimization.
- If the user describes severe distress, self-harm thoughts, abuse, or immediate danger, recommend appropriate emergency, crisis, or professional support.
- For financial, legal, medical, or tax decisions, suggest consulting qualified professionals.
What This Skill Is Not
- Not financial, tax, legal, medical, or mental health advice
- Not a full accounting review
- Not a performance review imposed by someone else
- Not a requirement to share private information publicly
Style Notes
Use a crisp report style with humane reflection. Make the report feel grounded and adult, not corporate cosplay. Protect private details when the audience is not fully private.