Vision Board Workbook for Moms: The Ultimate Simple Workbook

Help me Create a Vision Board Workbook for Moms

Hello friend,

Iโ€™ve been working on a Vision Board Workbook for Moms, and before I lock anything in, I want to build it around what you need- not what looks pretty on a shelf.

Your input matters because youโ€™re the one living real mom life with real goals, real responsibilities, and real limits on time and energy.

My goal is to create a workbook that feels like a supportive guide youโ€™ll actually use: clear prompts, helpful worksheets, and simple steps that move you from โ€œI wishโ€ to โ€œIโ€™m doing this.โ€

So, tell me- what would make this workbook worth your time?

What areas of your mom life do you want to improve (home, finances, self-care, routines, relationships, confidence, work goals)?

Are there any themes or sections youโ€™d love to see?

And what challenges should I cover so it feels realistic, not overwhelming?

Letโ€™s build something that fits your life and helps you move forward in a way that feels doable.

Part 1: Your Vision Board Journey

Before I finalize this workbook, I want to make sure the vision board experience inside it matches what you actually need.

Vision boards can be inspiring, but theyโ€™re even more powerful when they help you focus on the right things- your real priorities, your real season, and the goals that matter most to you right now.

1.1 Your Vision and Goals

This is the heart of the workbook. Itโ€™s where you get to name what you wantโ€”clearly and honestlyโ€”so your vision board isnโ€™t just pretty, but meaningful.

Iโ€™d love to know:

  • What goals or dreams do you want your vision board to reflect?
    • (Think: home life, routines, confidence, health, finances, relationships, work goals, personal growth, or โ€œI just want to feel like myself again.โ€)
  • Which life areas should this workbook include on purpose?
    • Are there themes youโ€™d want prompts forโ€”like peace at home, less overwhelm, healthier habits, family connection, or creating income from home?
  • What obstacles tend to get in the way for you?
    • Overwhelm, lack of time, inconsistency, motivation dips, mental load, self-doubtโ€”anything you name here helps me add exercises that support real-life follow-through.

If you share the areas you want to focus on (and what makes them hard sometimes), I can shape this workbook so it feels like it was made for you- not like a generic goal-setting book.

Vision Board Workbook

1.2 Your Preferred Workbook Format

Now I need your help with the feel of this workbookโ€”because format matters. Some moms love quick checkboxes and structured pages. Others want space to write, reflect, and think. And a lot of us need a mix, depending on the day.

Tell me what youโ€™d actually use:

  • Do you prefer interactive worksheets (checklists, fill-in-the-blanks, trackers)?
  • Do you like journal-style prompts (guided reflection with space to write)?
  • Do you want visual pages (vision mapping, mood boards, โ€œpick your prioritiesโ€ layouts)?

Or do you want a mix of all three?

Also- if youโ€™ve used other workbooks you enjoyed, what made them work for you?

Was it the simplicity, the layout, the prompts, the structure, the encouragement, or the way it helped you follow through?

Part 2: Crafting the Workbook Together

This is the fun part. I want to build a workbook that feels like it was made for real mom lifeโ€”not a perfect version of mom life. So letโ€™s shape the sections and the flow in a way that makes sense and feels doable.

2.1 Your Ideal Sections

If you could design the workbook yourself, what life areas would you want included as dedicated sections?

Some examples (just to spark ideas):

  • home routines and organization
  • self-care and energy
  • health and wellness
  • finances and budgeting
  • relationships and connection
  • personal growth and confidence
  • work goals or income goals
  • family rhythms and traditions

Now tell me:

  1. Which sections would you want the most?
  2. Are there any themes youโ€™d want included that you donโ€™t see listed?
  3. What topics would you want each section to cover so it feels practical- not fluffy?
  4. And do you care about the order?
    • For example, should it start with mindset and clarity, or jump straight into action steps and planning?

The more you share here, the more I can shape this into something youโ€™ll actually want to print, fill out, and come back to.

Vision Board Workbook

2.2 Worksheets That Actually Speak to You

This is where I want your input the most, because the right worksheets are what make a vision board feel useful instead of just inspiring for five minutes.

When you think about a workbook youโ€™d actually stick with, what helps you get clear?

Do you prefer goal-setting worksheets (break it down step-by-step)?

  • visualization prompts (future-you, ideal day, what you want more of/less of)?
  • reflection sheets (whatโ€™s working, whatโ€™s draining you, what needs to change)?
  • planning pages (monthly action steps, weekly focus, habit trackers)?
  • or quick โ€œchoose your prioritiesโ€ pages (checklists and prompts that donโ€™t take forever)?

If youโ€™ve used a worksheet before that truly helped you, what was it about it that worked?

Was it short and structured, more open-ended, or very specific?

And are there any prompts you wish a workbook would ask- questions that make you go, โ€œOh wowโ€ฆ thatโ€™s the real issue.โ€

2.3 Resources Youโ€™d Want Included (Optional but Helpful)

Iโ€™m also thinking about adding a small โ€œresourcesโ€ section at the end- not a huge list, just a few things that genuinely help moms feel inspired and supported.

So tell me:

  • Are there any tools you already love for vision boards or planning (apps, templates, journaling tools, Canva, Pinterest, etc.)?
  • Do you prefer quotes (short, punchy encouragement) or guided prompts (more practical than inspirational)?
  • Are there any books, creators, or podcasts that have helped you think differently about goals, mindset, or routines?

No pressure to have answers here- this section is optional, but your favorites would help me keep it relevant.

Part 3: Bringing Your Vision to Life

This part of the workbook is where the dream becomes doable.

Instead of only focusing on what you want, weโ€™ll focus on how to build it into real lifeโ€”step by step, without overwhelming yourself.

This section will cover the practical side of creating your vision board and using it in a way that actually supports you:

  • choosing a format (paper vs digital vs hybrid)
  • picking materials without overspending
  • creating your board in a realistic amount of time
  • and using your workbook pages to turn your vision into small, steady action

The goal is for this workbook to feel like a guide you can return to- especially when motivation fades and life gets busy again.

Vision Board Workbook

Letโ€™s talk about the practical side of creating your vision board

3.1 Materials and Tools

This is the part where vision boards can either feel funโ€ฆ or feel oddly overwhelming. I want this workbook to make the process easier, not harder, so Iโ€™d love to know what materials actually work for you.

When you picture making your vision board, what do you see yourself using- poster board, corkboard, a binder, a notebook, a digital board in Canva, printed images, magazines, stickers, or something else?

And is there anything about the materials side that tends to trip you up?
(Finding the right images, not knowing what to print, feeling like you need it to look โ€œperfect,โ€ not having the supplies, not wanting to spend money, not having time to cut/glue, etc.)

The more I understand your hurdles, the better I can build in simple tips and shortcuts.

Also- how important is the visual aesthetic to you?

Do you want your board to feel pretty and polished, or do you care more about it being meaningful and functional, even if itโ€™s simple?

Your answer helps me decide whether this section should include things like layout templates, image-finding shortcuts, budget-friendly supply lists, a no-printer option, or a โ€œgood enough boardโ€ method that still feels inspiring.


3.2 Personalizing Your Vision Board Workbook

I donโ€™t want this to be a generic workbook you fill out once and forget.

I want it to feel like something that reflects you– your season, your priorities, and your real life.

So tell me: what would make this workbook feel more personal and engaging for you?

Would you want space for personal anecdotes, reflection pages, or small โ€œreal life notesโ€ as you go?

Do you prefer a more structured format (boxes, prompts, step-by-step pages) or a free-form style (open writing space, creative pages, room to brainstorm)?

And are there any personal touches youโ€™d love to see included- like mood words, gentle affirmations, color themes, habit trackers, โ€œmy valuesโ€ pages, or โ€œwhat Iโ€™m letting go ofโ€ prompts?

If you share what youโ€™d actually use (and what youโ€™d skip), I can shape this workbook into something that feels supportive, doable, and genuinely motivating- rather than one more thing you feel like you should do.


If you have thoughts, you donโ€™t have to write an essay- one sentence is enough.

Your feedback is what will turn this into a workbook that truly serves moms, and I canโ€™t wait to hear what you want inside.

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7 thoughts on “Vision Board Workbook for Moms: The Ultimate Simple Workbook

  1. Beautiful and most clever. A roadmap to success. Fabulous post.

    Thank you for joining the Happy Tuesday Blog Hop.

    Have a fabulous Happy Tuesday. โ™ฅ

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