I've actually been told that I am too specific with my calling notes. I used to try to be too thorough and would have things like "SQ 21 was one beat late" which I've come to realize is overkill, especially when it's a cue with a 40-second fade. I was trying to hold myself accountable, but I realized that nobody cared about insignificant things like that. So I've tried to pare it down and will only note the ones that matter. It just took me a while to decide which ones matter.
For instance - I call the lights-up after a blackout too early, and actors are seen exiting the stage? That needs to be noted. I screwed up and therefore what the audience saw is not in line with what the director wanted. If it was a calling error, it's my fault. However, if the sound board operator accidentally doubletaps, that's the operator's error and will be noted as such. Same way I'd note if an actor screwed up: "actor forgot bag of coins on the prop table. Since he can't pay his scene partner without the coins, he improvised the line 'hang on, I have to run to the bank,' exited to pick up his prop, and then continued the scene." or whatever.
Basically, if it makes the performance work differently than it's supposed to, it's worth noting. Especially if it's my fault - I'm responsible for making it all run smoothly, so when I screw that up I need to admit it.