I’ve been re-reading The Organized Writer by Antony Johnston over the last few months. I love the book and the system it describes for focusing on writing by organizing away all non-writing (and writing for that matter) concerns. Of particular interset to me is the concept of never losing an idea. The author advocates for carrying a small notebook (or a phone or PDA) to jot down ideas as the arise, then reviewing those ideas later in the day. To me, this is genius!
There was a problem, however. Try as I might, I’ve been unable to stick to the rigor required to write down all my ideas as they occur to me. I’ll decide I’ll remember it later, (I won’t); I’ll decide to try extra-hard to review my notes at the end of the day, (I didn’t); and so on. The author of the book says that the reader should use whatever tool for writing and reviewing notes that they find to be the most useful. I loved the idea. I just couldn’t find the tool for me.
Then, I saw this presentation that I’ve written about before. It suggested working on personal projects in the same way I already preferred working at my job: issue tracking (via github in this case), changing one thing at a time, and documentation. It was revitalizing. I immediately setup three new repositories. Things got done more quickly on my projects.
Then, yesterday, it happened! I reached into my back pocket for my little paper notebook to write an idea into. It wasn’t there. I’d left it on the table next to the ham radio I was copying Morse code from.
I sighed. I reached for my phone, resigned to writing a note into Google Keep that I knew from experience I’d never look at again. Still though, practice makes perfect, follow the methodology. And then, as I was scrolling through apps looking for Keep, it hit me:
Open github instead!
I wrote the idea up as an issue in the project it pertained to, (The Organised Writer also advocates for organizing thoughts according to projects). It was easy! I’ll remember it! I’ll track it! I’ll work on it more! The connection of my two worlds—writing and programming/making—has created a much better, more positive workflow. Is this all just a one day high of connecting somewhat disparate parts of my life? I hope not; I hope it lasts. I’ll keep you posted on how it goes.
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