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> I would never delete my own archive of notes, because it contains a different kind of information: howtos for things I do infrequently, current state for personal projects I rotate in and out of over years, maintenance logs for my vehicles, identification details for every important account (account numbers, insurance expiry details etc).

It struck me as odd how the blog post waxed lyrical about "second brains" but the description of the notes seemed to point at mostly to-do lists. That's not what I would call a second brain. The definition of "second brain" is in line with the old tradition of engineering logs, where engineers write down things they did, measurements they took, and observations they did. On the other hand, to-do lists is just work you assign to yourself.

No wonder those notes caused anxiety. I would also be anxious if I was faced with a log with 7-years worth of chores that are both late and stale.

Logs are logs. You write down what you feel is important, and forget about them. After some time, you can delete them without a second thought. You write down stuff today because you feel it will help you in the future. If what you wrote down today is not a present from your past to your present, and instead is causing you grief, then just remove it from your notes.

As all things in life, you need to preserve the things that cause joy and push away those that cause grief. Your second brain is no different.



You can delete all the TODO lists in the world, but those hundreds of domain names that were registered because of a new brilliant idea but weren’t touched after you finished designing the logo still have another two and a half years before they expire :)


Should some one buy domain for a website that will aggregate and display the graveyard of buried project that never advanced beyond domain and logo ? maybe IdeaGraveyard.dev ? haha


Ouch, that hit a nerve.


Underrated comment.


No, it did not mostly refer to to-do lists. At least that's not what I understood.

It was an example, yes. But he also referred to Luhmann’s Zettelkasten, a huge collection of notes, systematically interconnected, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niklas_Luhmann#Note-taking_sys.... Looks like the author followed a similar approach in Obsidian, a tool to store markdown notes in an interconnected manner.

He wrote: "Roam Research turned bidirectional links into a cult. Obsidian let the cult go off-grid. The lore deepened. You weren’t taking notes. You were building a lattice of meaning. ... A quote would spark an insight, I’d clip it, tag it, link it - and move on."

But it didn't work out: "the insight was never lived. It was stored. ... In trying to remember everything, I outsourced the act of reflection. I didn’t revisit ideas. I didn’t interrogate them. I filed them away and trusted the structure. ... The more my system grew, the more I deferred the work of thought to some future self who would sort, tag, distill, and extract the gold. That self never arrived."

Hence, what he mostly wrote down were thoughts, ideas, quotes, hoping that insights and value will come from this huge collection. Turns out, it wasn't so easy for him. I believe he'll need more focus, more curation, a more targeted and heartfelt approach.

Well, it sounds like it did work out back then for Niklas Luhmann. He said that all his famous publications wouldn't have been possible without his structured note taking approach. His 90,000 cards were digitized and are now available online, see https://niklas-luhmann-archiv.de/bestand/zettelkasten/zettel...




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