The Case for Keeping a Paper Notebook

The friction argument for paper is usually made wrong. People say that the resistance of writing by hand slows you down and makes you think more carefully. That is sometimes true, but it’s not the main thing. The main thing is that a notebook has no other tabs. It cannot notify you. It does not suggest related content. It does not autosave to a cloud that requires a password reset. It is simply there, and so are you.

I use a small, unlined notebook and a ballpoint pen that cost less than a dollar. I carry it everywhere. I do not organize it. I do not tag or index. I occasionally flip back through old pages and am surprised by what I find — problems I had forgotten I solved, ideas I had forgotten I had, proof that I was thinking even on days I felt empty.

The notebook is not a productivity tool. It is a record that a mind was here, working on something. That turns out to be more valuable than any capture system.

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