This is about fine-tuning your second brain which guarantees you a principal advantage in life.
“The ability to intentionally and strategically allocate our attention is a competitive advantage in a distracted world. We have to jealously guard it like a valuable treasure. ”
High performance and and personal productivity is not a "natural state", it's like the skills of learning or problem solving that are taken granted by "normal" people (mainstream expectation is to believe that people are born with those skills and they can just get by with gaining knowledge and doing things). Thus majority of people don't really bother systematically to develop those skills as they feel "productive enough" and the real performance potential remains an unknown unknown to them. One needs a strong drive and reason to take up this journey. GTD and others will always remain classics (before the "digital" era personanal efficiency provided a clear competitive advantage) but recently the most influential books in this domain have been written by people who have developed their methods to cope with or compensate for shortcomings in their cognitive function/efficiency compared to "normal" people (i.e. ADHD, coping with chronic pain) or whose aim is to help people with such conditions to function more efficiently. This brings us to books like "The Bullet Journal Method", "Stolen Focus", "Mindsight" and the one here. I have a deep respect towards such individuals who despite their own mind's limits achieve world class performance and then dedicate themselves in empowering others with their findings and also significantly improving the performance of "the normal people" who value it. I should have read this book a few months earlier as the last systematic effort to "organize my digital life" took place in December last year when I based my research mainly on different blog articles and Youtube videos on the subject: eventually I came away with selecting Evernote as my digital information management platform and Todoist as task management tool (still need to work on integrating them more seamlessly into my everyday life). I have to say that there is definitely a lot of GTD and importance of habits (i.e. Atomic Habits) in this book (in some cases it's stated directly, in some cases not so much). There wasn't that much completely new information in this book, but it was definitely presented from a novel angle. The topic is definitely relevant just after reading a book about Superintelligence and AI.
I found the PARA method intesting as I have been struggling to find the top level categories for organizing information. PARA is based on a simple observation: that there are only four categories that encompass all the information in your life.
* Projects: Short-term efforts in your work or life that you’re working on now. Projects have a couple of features that make them an ideal way to organize modern work. First, they have a beginning and an end; they take place during a specific period of time and then they finish. Second, they have a specific, clear outcome that needs to happen in order for them to be checked off as complete, such as “finalize,” “green-light,” “launch,” or “publish.”
* Areas: What I’m Committed to Over Time As important as projects are, not everything is a project. For example, the area of our lives called “Finances” doesn’t have a definite end date.”
* Resources: Things I Want to Reference in the Future The third category of information that we want to keep is resources. This is basically a catchall for anything that doesn’t belong to a project or an area and could include any topic you’re interested in gathering information about
* Archives: Things I’ve Completed or Put on Hold Finally, we have our archives. This includes any item from the previous three categories that is no longer active. (out of sight, out of mind, but still searchable...).
Assimilating information through CODE (capture, organize, distill and express).
*Capture - to use actionably (or utility) as an information filter, shrinking down the magnitude and complexity of our learning curve. It forces to reflect what is important to make the notes more valuable later on, you become better at it the more you practice it.
*Organising according to PARA.
*Distillation recognises that behind every complex wall of text sits the essence of an idea that binds the text together (80/20 rule).
*Expression is about orchestrating the right "intermediate packets". In the second brain we rebuild and we can always reorganise and repurpose the packets according to how accessible they need to be for us to work through a new agenda (i.e. creating a view through existing content with tags... reminder here to check author's separate writings on using tags).
"Keep what resonates (Capture) Save for actionability (Organize) Find the essence (Distill) Show your work (Express)"
PROGRESSIVE SUMMARIZATION
A helpful rule of thumb is that each layer of highlighting should include no more than 10–20 percent of the previous layer. every time you “touch” a note, you should make it a little more discoverable for your future self.
“Anything you might want to accomplish—executing a project at work, getting a new job, learning a new skill, starting a business—requires finding and putting to use the right information. Your professional success and quality of life depend directly on your ability to manage information effectively. According to the New York Times, the average person’s daily consumption of information now adds up to a remarkable 34 gigabytes.1 A separate study cited by the Times estimates that we consume the equivalent of 174 full newspapers’ worth of content each and every day, five times higher than in 1986.2 Instead of empowering us, this deluge of information often overwhelms us. Information Overload has become Information Exhaustion, taxing our mental resources and leaving us constantly anxious that we’re forgetting something.”
“The three habits most important to your Second Brain include: Project Checklists: Ensure you start and finish your projects in a consistent way, making use of past work. Weekly and Monthly Reviews: Periodically review your work and life and decide if you want to change anything. Noticing Habits: Notice small opportunities to edit, highlight, or move notes to make them more discoverable for your future self.”
"There are four essential capabilities that we can rely on a Second Brain to perform for us: Making our ideas concrete. Revealing new associations between ideas. Incubating our ideas over time. Sharpening our unique perspectives."
"Unlike modern readers, who follow the flow of a narrative from beginning to end, early modern Englishmen read in fits and starts and jumped from book to book. They broke texts into fragments and assembled them into new patterns by transcribing them in different sections of their notebooks."
"For modern, professional notetaking, a note is a “knowledge building block”—a discrete unit of information interpreted through your unique perspective and stored outside your head."
"it wasn’t jobs that required advanced skills or years of training that were predicted to fare best. It was jobs that required the ability to convey “not just information but a particular interpretation of information.”
"Every time you take a note, ask yourself, “How can I make this as useful as possible for my future self? Your notes will be useless if you can’t decipher them in the future, or if they’re so long that you don’t even try. Think of yourself not just as a taker of notes, but as a giver of notes”
"Feynman’s approach was to maintain a list of a dozen open questions." (and whenever new general knowledge arose then test all those 12 questions against it).
"If you try to save every piece of material you come across, you run the risk of inundating your future self with tons of irrelevant information. At that point, your Second Brain will be no better than scrolling through social media." When you use up too much energy taking notes, you have little left over for the subsequent steps that add far more value: making connections, imagining possibilities, formulating theories, and creating new ideas of your own.
"The archives are like the freezer—items are in cold storage until they are needed, which could be far into the future. Resources are like the pantry—available for use in any meal you make, but neatly tucked away out of sight in the meantime. Areas are like the fridge—items that you plan on using relatively soon, and that you want to check on more frequently. Projects are like the pots and pans cooking on the stove—the items you are actively preparing right now."
"Taking notes during meetings is a common practice, but it’s often not clear what we should do with those notes. They are often messy, with the action items buried among random comments. I often use Progressive Summarization to summarize my notes after phone calls to make sure I’m extracting every bit of value from them."
"eventually you’ll have so many IPs at your disposal that you can execute entire projects just by assembling previously created IPs. This is a magical experience that will completely change how you view productivity. The idea of starting anything from scratch will become foreign to you"
"two activities your brain has the most difficulty performing at the same time: choosing ideas (known as selection) and arranging them into a logical flow (known as sequencing)."
"The more you outsource and delegate the jobs of capturing, organizing, and distilling to technology, the more time and energy you’ll have available for the self-expression that only you can do."
“important to separate capture and organize into two distinct steps:” (a mind cannot do both at the same time effectively).
“PARA isn’t a filing system; it’s a production system. It’s no use trying to find the “perfect place” where a note or file belongs. There isn’t one. The whole system is constantly shifting and changing in sync with your constantly changing life.”
“The practice of building a Second Brain is more than the sum of capturing facts, theories, and the opinions of others. At its core, it is about cultivating self-awareness and self-knowledge.”
“Most notes apps have an “inbox” or “daily notes” section where new notes you’ve captured are saved until you can revisit them and decide where they belong. Think of it as a waiting area where new ideas live until you are ready to digest them into your Second Brain.”
“For many people, their understanding of notetaking was formed in school. You were probably first told to write something down because it would be on the test. This implied that the minute the test was over, you would never reference those notes again.”
“It is when you begin expressing your ideas and turning your knowledge into action that life really begins to change. You’ll read differently, becoming more focused on the parts most relevant to the argument you’re building. You’ll ask sharper questions, no longer satisfied with vague explanations or leaps in logic. You’ll naturally seek venues to show your work, since the feedback you receive will propel your thinking forward like nothing else. You’ll begin to act more deliberately in your career or business, thinking several steps beyond what you’re consuming to consider its ultimate potential. It’s not necessarily about becoming a professional artist, online influencer, or business mogul: it’s about taking ownership of your work, your ideas, and your potential to contribute in whatever arena you find yourself in. It doesn’t matter how impressive or grand your output is, or how many people see it. It could be just between your family or friends, among your colleagues and team, with your neighbors or schoolmates—what matters is that you are finding your voice and insisting that what you have to say matters. You have to value your ideas enough to share them. You have to believe that the smallest idea has the potential to change people’s lives. If you don’t believe that now, start with the smallest project you can think of to begin to prove to yourself that your ideas can make a difference.”