Wow! That’s totally interesting…
I LOVE long prayers… I love short prayers too - like some of the quick prayers in Saint Therese of Lisieux’s very spontaneous “little way”, but long prayers are awesome…
I will learn more about St Brigid, but I have said many lengthy prayers, and the best way I have found to make the most of the prayer is by journaling…
What you’re describing, however, is a bit more complex than keeping a mere diary… By “missing a day” and making up for it - your introducing numbers into the issue… I dont know if Jesus was so big on accounting, and the spirituality of “Catholic math” can sometimes be a bit weird, if not totally superstitious at times… But - in any case - I’m accountant, and I’ve gone over this problem on both minute and macroscopic levels… so I’ll explain how to keep a numeric prayer journal…
Positive examples of “numeric prayer journals” might be St Maxmillian Kolbe, as he (like so many Priests) kept a “mass ledger”; Friar Luca Pacioli was a Franciscan who developed the fundamental treatise on double entry book keeping and accounting - he has great ideas on the matter…
But for you, I’d recommend, Saint Faustina, who (under the guidance of Fr Sopocko,SJ) kept a daily record of “prayerful defeats and victories”… And, since Fr Sopocko was an Ignatian, there’s little doubt Saint Ignatius of Loyola’s Prayer of Examen had an influence on the development of that chart (in Ntbk #1,Paragraphs 161-170)
https://diaryofstfaustina.wordpress.com/2017/06/07/diary-of-sr-faustina-1st-notebook-par-161-170/
Your prayer is far longer than what’s contained in that chart, but - if you wanted to be so accurate as to account for a full twelve year prayer - it would help to know Saint Ignatius’ Examen Prayer actually would consist of Major and Minor Examens… Your daily transactions, interactions, and spiritual activities get noted as a minor examen, and then at night you do your Major Examen…
From an accounting standpoint, I do this at work… when I complete a task at work, I make note of it, which is like doing a short, minor examen… at the end of the day, when I sum up all my work, I am doing a Major Examen… BUT - actually - one day is not really that major… accounting is a cyclical process, so we are constantly reviewing our work, summing up our activities, and periodically “closing the books” from smaller, minor, more subsidiary ledgers to larger, more general ledgers… and these larger ledgers we then compare from period to period over the life of a venture (for tax purposes,financial statements, income and cashflow verification, etc)…
(Cont’d below…)