How to
How to label CGM events so you can learn later (without constant notes)
A practical how-to about minimal annotation for experienced adults, caregivers.
- Keep minimal annotation practical enough that another person can follow it.
- Visible instructions beat good intentions.
- A short repeatable system survives stress better than a clever one.
The problem with minimal annotation is not knowledge in the abstract. It is timing, handoffs, and the fact that nobody feels fully organized when this comes up.
It is written for experienced adults, caregivers. The goal is to reduce friction, not to make the routine look impressive.
Start with the real constraint
The useful question is simple: what falls apart first around minimal annotation? Fix that piece before you fix anything elegant.
Set up the boring parts first
- put the instructions for minimal annotation somewhere visible
- decide who notices the issue first and who is the backup
- keep the needed supplies in the same place every time
Where this usually breaks
The rough spots are usually ordinary ones. Somebody is running late, the bag got changed, the room is noisy, or the household quietly started relying on memory again.
- quiet routine changes that nobody bothered to mention
- supplies drifting into another bag, room, or jacket
- helpful adults improvising because the written note was too vague
Keep the handoff short
The end goal is not a perfect system. It is a system that still works when the day got ugly and nobody wants a long explanation.
Use the related reading block below to keep this tied to the rest of the library. A narrow page is useful, but only if it connects to the next practical step.