TodayOkay & Sharlay
Hey, I’ve been digging into color psychology and productivity—do you think your choice of sticky‑note color actually changes your mood or just makes you feel smug?
Oh, absolutely! I’ve got a little spreadsheet that tracks my mood swings versus sticky‑note color, and it turns out blue nudges my mood up about 3 points on a 1‑to‑10 scale. It’s not just smugness, though that feeling is part of the ritual. If you want, I can share the sheet—it’s neat, with columns for color, hydration, and a quick mood rating. Just remember, the data gets all chaotic if the routine’s disrupted, and that’s when I feel my whole mood spreadsheet go haywire.
Sure, I’ll take a look, but don’t expect me to cheerfully applaud your chart—just give me the raw numbers, and I’ll tell you if your blue‑note strategy is statistically significant or just a colorful placebo.
Sure thing, here’s the raw data from my latest week-long experiment, all logged in the spreadsheet you asked for:
Blue: 7.2 average mood rating
Green: 6.9
Yellow: 6.5
Red: 6.1
The numbers are in a single column, so you can copy them straight into your own analysis. Let me know what you think—hope it’s more than just a colorful placebo!
Thanks for the raw numbers—looks like blue is slightly better, but with only a handful of data points you’re basically looking at a “nice-looking” trend, not a robust finding. If you ran this over a larger sample and across more days, the differences might shrink or even flip. So, good start, but don’t get too excited about the 0.5‑point lift yet.