Our home is somewhat cluttered, which motivates me to cut down on possessions, including a stack of notebooks that have moved with us multiple times. Sifting through old notes and journals has given me a clearer understanding of effective note-taking management.
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The prevailing trend in productivity software suggests saving and organizing everything, supported by ample storage and tagging options for future retrieval. With AI features now available, forgotten content can be surfaced from deep within your notes.
My decluttering efforts have highlighted the need for mindful note retention. These old notes, spanning Moleskine notebooks, calendars, Evernote , Google Drive, Dropbox, and more, often consist of single-use, redundant information.
Sorting through these notes is a blend of annoyance, sadness, and nostalgia. The annoyance comes from realizing these notes, carried for years, hold little value. Had I reviewed them earlier, I could have discarded them long ago. It's sad to see how long I've held onto them.
Occasionally, I find a nostalgic gem—an important date, an insight, or something more valuable than my morning breakfast. These gems justify the effort of sorting through the clutter.
Destroying each notebook after careful inspection lightens my mind, freeing me from the burden of carrying unnecessary items. It’s a relief to tear out and shred pages, especially those with sensitive information.
This discarding practice involves reading each page to identify useful information. Anything worth keeping is transcribed into Obsidian , either appended to existing notes or forming new ones.
For digital notes, Evernote proves useful with its recent transcription features. The AI excels at recognizing my handwriting, allowing me to scan longer notes for transcription, which can then be condensed.
Even old journal entries are entered. Journaling often involves rambling to uncover true insights. The realization is what matters, and AI helps summarize these entries for review and personal interpretation.
This process has taught me the importance of frequent reviews and revisions. Ephemeral notes, valuable only in the moment, should be quickly discarded. Useful notes should be aggregated with similar ones. Regular reviews would have prevented this monumental task.
The word 'indefinitely' implies no defined time. Now, I’m defining a time for some notes to remain, emphasizing the value of early elimination to be more mindful of what is kept.
Previously, I used Rocketbook notebooks to reduce clutter, but this merely shifted the mess from paper to digital. A digital mess is still a mess. I've realized that my approach with Rocketbook needs to be more intentional. Instead of scanning every page and adding to the digital clutter, I now focus on extracting only the truly valuable information before erasing and reusing the pages. Often, a whole page of notes might only contain one or two key insights worth preserving. By selectively digitizing these nuggets of value, I avoid the trap of creating a digital archive of unnecessary information.
Through this journey of decluttering both physical and digital notes, I've realized that minimalism in note-taking is not just about reducing clutter but about enhancing clarity and focus. By discarding the superfluous and honing in on the truly valuable insights, I am not only simplifying my environment but also refining my thinking process. I am learning to embrace constraints as opportunities for creativity, ensuring that each note I keep serves a clear purpose and contributes to my broader goals.
Ultimately, this minimalist approach to note-taking has not only decluttered my physical and digital note spaces but has also fostered a more intentional and purposeful way of capturing and utilizing information. By focusing on what truly matters and letting go of the rest, I am creating a more agile and responsive personal knowledge system.
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Great post and I know the feeling! I'm still often using pen and paper for quick notes but also using Notion which I find just awesome cos it's so customisable. Yeah, it gets messy there as well but then I just create new pages and make fresh start 😀
That was my approach to Evernote. But over time I get too many results when I'm searching for something. So it is making more sense for me to copy/paste stuff I want to keep to topic-related notes. And I delete text or notes that are no longer useful. But, pen and paper are a good pre-filter before going digital.
Indeed, that's well put,
I am in the same boat as you with tons of old notes and half-written Hive posts. Obsidian is a great tool isn't it? I wish it did code better so I could get rid of one more app (VS Code). Recently installed an extension that turns notes into flashcards, pretty cool.
I haven't explored too many extensions on Obsidian. I mostly use the tables, dataview, and calendar.
The actual work notes and thinking through are done on other platforms like Mem, Evernote, and Voicenotes. The end results are stored in Obsidian.
I don't do any coding, so I don't have any experience on that type of workflow.