December 2, 2025

Making a map of dead ends

For me, pencil and paper works best to clarify an uncertain idea; the type of idea that may be a single sentence in a notebook, “A story about how we cannot see the forest for the trees sometimes.”

There are often more bad ideas than good ones to begin with when an idea is this unformed. If I try to flesh this idea out on a computer via a word processing tool or a tablet, bad ideas are instinctively and easily erased. And if they are erased, are they also easily forgotten? And if they are forgotten, does it become easier to generate the bad idea again? To revisit old ground? To feel that progress is slow and circular?

With marks on paper, bad ideas remain visible. The page begins to reveal a map of paths that lead to dead ends. With more visibility of the bad paths, is it easier to find the good one? The right one?

Other observations
January 27, 2026

Effort has value

Whether we’re aware of it or not, humans tend to be able to feel the human effort behind work.

January 20, 2026

Brahm’s first symphony is an anomaly

If it’s rare for the first thing that anyone makes to be the greatest of all time, then do we have no other choice but to keep making?

January 13, 2026

No one remembers Mike

Which two names come to mind when we think about the crew of the Apollo 11 space mission, and why isn’t one of them “Mike”?

January 6, 2026

A new year reflection not resolution

If the beginning of every years is spent anticipating the year to come, what does it mean for celebrating the year we’ve just lived?

December 30, 2025

Procrastination or rest?

How do I know if reading books, playing video games, going for walks and doing chores around the house is procrastination or rest?

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