A sabbatical is one of those decisions that lives in your head for a year before you start telling anyone about it, and then suddenly involves your manager, your finances, your partner, your healthcare, your travel plans, and the question of what you're actually going to *do* with the time. Most of those threads start in different places — a private journal entry, a spreadsheet, a conversation in the car — and never come together until they have to.

The thing about sabbatical planning is that the planning itself is part of the work. The clearer you get about why you want it and what you want from it, the better the actual time off goes. A vault that holds the financial side, the logistical side, the project side, and the messy thinking side in one place — with the agent doing the searching when something comes up — turns the planning into something coherent instead of scattered.

## One vault, one parent page, child pages for every dimension

In Docapybara, *Sabbatical* gets a top-level page, and underneath sit child pages for *Why*, *Finances*, *Employer conversation*, *Logistics*, *Projects*, *Conversations with partner*, and *Re-entry*. Pages nest indefinitely, OneNote-style, so each section grows as the planning matures.

The agent treats the whole tree as one searchable surface. *"What did I write about the financial runway, and how does it square with the projects I'm thinking about?"* gets answered across pages, not from one folder at a time. (For the broader career-shape decisions a sabbatical sits inside, [Career Transitions and Job Searches, With a Vault Behind You](/guides/personal-life/career-transitions-job-search/) is adjacent — same vault, different scope.)

## Why — the page that does the most work, that you'll skip

The *Why* page is the one most people skip and the one that makes everything downstream easier. Two paragraphs. What the sabbatical is actually for. What you're hoping to learn, change, complete, or recover from. What it specifically isn't (a long vacation, a job hunt in disguise, an escape from a single person at work).

This page evolves. Every few weeks, drop a quick note about how your thinking is shifting. Voice is the right tool — walk around the block and talk for two minutes. Audio recording in-app gives you a transcript with speaker labels. The transcript drops on the page; the agent can summarize the evolution: *"Across the last three months of my Why notes, what's stayed consistent and what's changed?"*

Surprisingly often, the *Why* page changes the whole plan. A sabbatical you thought was about travel turns out to be about a writing project. A sabbatical you thought was about rest turns out to be about deciding whether to leave the job entirely. Better to find out at month two than month nine.

## Finances — the runway, the cushion, and the comeback

The *Finances* page is the gating constraint on most sabbaticals. An inline database via the `:::database:::` directive captures the picture: account, current balance, monthly burn assumed during sabbatical, runway months, notes.

For the runway calculation specifically, keep a simple spreadsheet in prose form: estimated monthly expenses (rent or mortgage, food, healthcare premium, travel, miscellaneous), buffer for surprises, total monthly burn, savings on hand, runway in months. The agent can update it. *"Bump healthcare premium to $X/month — COBRA quote came in higher than I expected."* Recalculates.

For the comeback specifically — what your finances look like the week you go back to work — keep notes on whether you're returning to your old job, looking for a new one, freelancing for a few months, or doing something else. Each option has a different runway profile. The agent can pull the comparison: *"What runway do I need under each comeback scenario, and which one am I closest to having?"*

For tax-year-specific moves you might make during the sabbatical (lower-income year for Roth conversions, etc.), [How to Use AI Notes for Tax Season Preparation](/guides/personal-life/tax-season-preparation-ai-notes/) covers the tax-side workflow that pairs with this.

## Employer conversation — what you're going to ask for and how

For sabbaticals from a current employer (paid, unpaid, formal program, informal arrangement), the *Employer conversation* page is the one you'll re-read most often as the date approaches.

What you're asking for: paid or unpaid, length, formal leave or resignation, return guarantee, what happens to benefits and equity vesting. Why it's a good deal for the employer too: continuity plan, knowledge transfer, what you'll come back better at. What you're prepared to compromise on. The fallback if the answer's no.

After every conversation with your manager or HR, drop a quick note. Date, what you discussed, where you each landed, what's open. The agent can summarize: *"What's the current state of the leave-of-absence question — what's been agreed, what's still being decided?"*

For the actual *ask* meeting, the agent can help draft. *"Take the points from my employer-conversation page and draft a one-page proposal I'll send to my manager — keep it short, anticipate their two main concerns."* You get a draft grounded in your actual notes. (The broader writing-grounded-in-your-own-material shape is at [How to Draft Emails, Proposals, and Newsletters Inside Your Notes App](/guides/creatives-content/draft-emails-proposals-in-notes/).)

## Logistics — healthcare, housing, and the stuff that's easy to forget

The *Logistics* page is where the practical questions live. Healthcare (COBRA, marketplace, partner's plan, international coverage). Housing (keeping the apartment, subletting, moving out, living somewhere else). Mail and bills (forwarding, autopay, the things that need to keep happening without you watching). Phone and data plans, especially if you're going abroad. Visas if relevant.

Each item gets a row in an inline database with status (researched, decided, in progress, done) and notes. The agent can pull the open list: *"What's still open on logistics, and what's the deadline for each?"* The week before the sabbatical starts, this is the page you'll live on.

For travel-heavy sabbaticals, the [Planning Any Trip, Event, or Move in One Vault](/guides/personal-life/plan-trip-event-move-ai-notes/) shape extends the *Logistics* page into a full per-destination structure.

## Projects — what you actually want to spend the time on

The *Projects* page is the one that makes the time worth taking. List the things you're considering: the book you've been wanting to write, the new skill you want to learn, the trip you've been postponing, the side business you want to test, the family time you want to actually have, the recovery from burnout you need.

For each project, a child page with the question it's answering, the rough scope, what success would look like, and a few notes on how you'd actually start. The agent can summarize the candidate list: *"What projects am I considering for the sabbatical, and how much time would each one realistically take?"*

The honest move is realizing you can't do all of them. Pick two or three that fit the *Why* page and the available time. The agent can help with the trade-off: *"Looking at my Why and the project list, which two or three projects fit the goals best, and which are the ones I'd be doing because they sound nice?"*

For learning a specific skill during the sabbatical, the [AI Notes for Learning a New Skill: One Vault Instead of Five Apps](/guides/personal-life/ai-notes-learning-new-skill/) shape carries the project page into a real working structure.

## Conversations with partner — the alignment that makes the time work

If you're partnered, the partner conversations are the ones that determine whether the sabbatical is actually relaxing or a months-long source of friction. A *Conversations* page (with a section per topic, dated entries) holds what you've talked through.

After each conversation, drop a quick note. *"Talked about the rent question. Agreed I'll cover my share from savings, partner takes the lead on logistics during my time off. Open: what we do for the August travel idea."* Voice works here too — thirty seconds of summary takes less effort than typing.

The agent can summarize the state of any open question: *"What's the state of the August travel question — what have we agreed, what's still open?"* Same shape as wedding-planning conversations, lower stakes — see [Planning a Wedding (or Any Major Life Event) in One Vault](/guides/personal-life/plan-wedding-major-life-event/) for the bigger version of the same conversation-tracking pattern.

## A starter shape for the first month of planning

Before the starter list, one more page worth naming: *Re-entry*. It's what most sabbatical takers don't think about until they're in month seven and realize the comeback is two months away. It captures what you've learned, what you want to keep doing, what you don't want to slip back into, what conversations you want to have with your manager when you return. During the sabbatical itself, drop quick notes here — end of each month, ten minutes, voice or text. When the comeback approaches, the agent can summarize: *"What did I write across the sabbatical about what I want to be different when I'm back at work?"* (For the broader life-archive shape this becomes part of, see [Turn Casual Captures Into a Searchable Life Archive](/guides/personal-life/casual-captures-searchable-life-archive/).)

If you're moving from "I've been thinking about a sabbatical for a year" to actual planning, this is what we'd suggest starting with:

- **Sabbatical** — top-level parent
- **Why** — two paragraphs, evolves over time
- **Finances** — inline database + runway calculation
- **Employer conversation** — proposal + dated meeting notes
- **Logistics** — inline database of open items
- **Projects** — candidate list, child pages per project
- **Conversations with partner** — sectioned, dated
- **Re-entry** — empty for now, fill during the sabbatical

That's it. The vault grows as the plan matures. The agent does the synthesis when something needs to come together — the proposal for your manager, the budget conversation with your partner, the project shortlist for the actual time off.

A sabbatical works when the planning was clear and the priorities were honest. The vault makes the planning easier to revisit and the priorities easier to keep in view.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/) — start with the *Why* page, and the next time you're chewing on what the sabbatical is actually for, you'll have somewhere to put it.