You don’t realize you need an idea garden until you’re using one.
Most people have good ideas throughout the day but don’t capture them because they know those ideas could grow into big projects—and they’re not ready to commit to that right now.
The notebook lets you plant those seeds without committing to anything.
When you write something and think “oh, that’s a good idea”—that’s your signal. Write it down. Sometimes just a few words is enough. Mark it with a star in the margin and flag it with a sticky note.
Now when your notebook is closed, you can see where your ideas are parked.
Eventually, one of three things happens:
You do it. Remove the flag, mark it done with a page reference to where you executed it.
You decide against it. Strike it out, note why.
You forget about it. The flag sits there for months. That’s fine. When you notice it later, you can decide then.
You’re separating “having an idea” from “committing to an idea.” You can capture everything without feeling overwhelmed by everything. The ideas are there when you’re ready for them, marked and findable, but not demanding immediate action.
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This is part of a series about Hand-Write. Think Better.—a method for using paper to think more clearly. Get the book →
