|
|
|
|
|
by ZeroCool2u
1328 days ago
|
|
I really prefer the act of physically writing notes, but not being able to search them is kind of a deal breaker. Physically writing them helps me remember, but I'm always going to want to look back and reference things on occasion, that's basically half the purpose of writing them in the first place. It's the only reason I'd consider getting an iPad, but it just seems so wasteful for that express purpose. |
|
But this post has me thinking about separation of concerns. Maybe I should stick to using Notion for anything that I want to search later and use the notebook for the aforementioned drafting and as a work-specific journal. While I haven't tried it much, I believe there's value in "brain-dumping" your day in a simple fashion similar to a diary. A therapist may advise you to deeply introspect on your overall state for that day, which I do think is a valuable tool, but may cause some inertia as a hard requirement for a "work-specific diary". Writing daily events in a simple fashion alongside some optionally additional, also simple, notes could help sort of "flush your mental buffer" of grand-scheme unimportant day-to-day information and help remember more important information. Sort of in the vein of Sherlock Holmes concept of his "mental attic" in the sense that you want to take care of removing/prevent clutter and instead keep track of what's useful to you.