One of the most valuable things a notebook does is help you close open loops—those things you said you’d figure out and then never quite did.
You know the ones. Questions you need to answer. Decisions you keep avoiding. Things that pop into your head at 2am because your brain won’t let them go.
Here’s a simple system: When you write something that needs follow-up, mark it in the margin with a double-line arrow pointing at the text. Put a small sticky note flag there too.
Now when your notebook is closed, you can see these flags poking out. Open to any flag and you’re right back at that open loop, with the full page of context.
When you’ve decided or done the thing:
- Remove the sticky note
- Strike through the arrow
- Write the date
- Add a page reference to where you recorded the resolution
Both pages now reference each other. The loop is closed. You have a record of both the question and the answer.
This is where the notebook earns its keep. You’ve been thinking about questions for days or weeks, but you haven’t had to hold all of it in your head simultaneously.
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This is part of a series about Hand-Write. Think Better.—a method for people who feel overwhelmed to start simply writing more on paper. Get the book →
