My Reading Journey Backwards and Forwards

Author: vienna (Page 8 of 9)

Change

A book about adult behavioral change – and how hard it is by Jeffrey A. Kottler

Reflections and Random Thoughts

I started this book in May 2022 and finished it last night, September 16th, 2023. It took so long not only because the beginning bored me but also because I tried to read too many books simultaneously. Especially if I’m bored – but that is a story for another time. I’ve recently committed to reading* one or at most two books at a time, so I finished, finally. But back to the book.

It’s well-researched, and there are several engaging stories of personal transformation and change. I am hung up on the subject of change. The conflict between the never-ending desire to change and the equally persistent resistance fascinates me. So I read a lot about it. Perhaps that is why I felt I didn’t find anything new here. But if you’re interested in the subject matter and haven’t read a lot about it you’ll probably find it worth the read.

“evolution hasn’t set us up for the attainment of happiness, merely its pursuit.”” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

Well, this one makes me feel a little better about never feeling like anything is quite good enough!

Notes from my Zettlekasten

“One of the most interesting mysteries related to change efforts is how small steps often lead to huge gains.” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

For more on this concept, read One Small Step Can Change Your Life – Robert Maurer Ph.D

“all behavior persists because it is doing something that is useful for the person,” (Jeffrey A. Kottler, Change)

What Everyone Else Thinks

You can read the reviews here. You can buy it here.

Shadows of the Neanderthal – David Hutchins

First Read November 2021

This is a book about Mental Models and how they shape our experience of the world. I try to read it at least every year.

From the book – “Here’s the moral: The way we see the world affects our experience of the world. When the way we see the world changes, we can then change our role in the world and get very different results. Herein lies the key to remarkable and enduring change. For” (David Hutchens, Shadows of the Neanderthal) #mental_models #change

Digital Zettlekasten

author David Kadavy

March 28, 2023

Now this book, I love. It clearly explains some basic concepts about Zettlekasten that I’ve had trouble with. Like the definitions of fleeting notes relative to literature notes relative to permanent notes. I’ve been trying to understand this for two years!

Readwise

March 27th, 2023

Back in December my laptop stopped working and I lost everything on it. I didn’t realize when I reinstalled Windows that my Readwise stopped importing my notes. I should have noticed before this, it stopped importing on Dec 22nd 2022, but I didn’t.

In any case I imported all my book highlights for the last three months. I was really surprised to see that I have 96 highlights from Thinking Fast and Slow – and I haven’t even finished the book! Then I noticed a pattern, I have more highlights from books I don’t like than from books I like. I’ll have to see what that is all about.

“Never trust anyone who has not brought a book with them.” – Lemony Snicket

Zettlekasten

A Way to Build a Zettelkasten

I changed the title of this article from the expected “How To Build a Zettelkasten” – to “A Way to Build a Zettelkasten” – specifically, it’s my way. It’s not the only way. I stress that because so much of the literature around Zettelkasten focuses on rules, most of which just don’t work for me. For example;

“Ideally, new notes are written with explicit reference to already existing notes…” (Sönke Ahrens, How to Take Smart Notes)

Maybe, maybe not.  

What if your Zettelkasten is new? What will you reference?

Or the insistence by almost everyone on three kinds of notes: literature notes, fleeting notes, and permanent notes, if you read Sonke Ahrens. See my rant on Zettelkasten language below – in my Zettelkasten method, a *note is a note.

Then there is this gem:

“On the matter of highlighting texts, I will say this: highlighting is not advisable. It is not a good method for focused reading of challenging and complex information. For challenging material, it’s best to invest the time required to reformulate it, and reflect on it in the form of notes. There are no shortcuts.”

Scott P. Scheper, Antinet Zettelkasten

I couldn’t disagree more. Highlighting both physically and digitally is a great way to find material we may want to review or add to our Zettlekasten. And there are definitely shortcuts! There is no virtue in spending more time and effort than necessary. As there is no virtue in turning this into a miserable experience. Use every shortcut you can think of – and share them with me if you come up with something that works for you. Many of my shortcuts are outlined in the section of this article titled Work Flow.

The bottom line is, does your Zettelkasten work for you?

I don’t do several things that practically everyone recommends. It works for me, and it might work for you. This article is about finding your way, with a few suggestions from me that might help.

The Big Questions

Why Build a Zettlekasten -Your Purpose

From David Kadavy’s – Digital Zettlekasten (worth the read), “The point of a Zettelkasten is to turn your notes into completed writing. The act of note-taking helps solidify knowledge in your mind while developing miniature rough drafts you can turn into completed writing.”

For me – It’s a point, not the point. If you’re creating a Zettelkasten, you (probably) have a reason, but you don’t need one. Perhaps you want to remember more of what you read, or you may want to think about something later but don’t want to interrupt your reading now. You might be planning an article or a book and happened upon a thought that relates. Or maybe you just want to tell someone about something you read and don’t want to lose it. But if it’s nothing more than because you want to, that is also okay.

Whatever your purpose, the notes are for you; let’s not take the joy out of it by creating unbreakable rules. We need structure so that it will be useful and perhaps some intention so that we’re glad we built it later, but let’s go easy on the hard and fast rules.

Key Reasons for Creating a Zettlekasten

Enhancing Writing and Thinking: By creating a dynamic repository of notes, you can improve your writing process. Your notes serve as a foundation for generating new ideas and producing texts, thereby optimizing the workflow of learning and knowledge production.

Managing Information Overload: In an age of information overload, the Zettelkasten method provides a structured approach to managing vast amounts of data by breaking it down into smaller, manageable notes that can be easily navigated and referenced.

Facilitating Connections: The method emphasizes linking notes to create relationships between different pieces of information. This interconnectedness helps users see patterns and develop insights that might not be apparent when information is stored in isolation.

Knowledge Organization: A Zettelkasten allows you to systematically organize your thoughts and information, making it easier to reference and build upon existing knowledge. This organization is crucial for academic work, research, and personal projects.

Overall, the Zettelkasten method is often adopted because it helps us synthesize and utilize knowledge, i.e., think more efficiently.

Analog or Digital?

While I firmly believe in the value of writing with pen and paper (sometimes!), I vote Digital all the way! If you read Scott Scheper’s Antinet Zettlekasten (and I did, all 600+ pages of it), you might walk away convinced that if you don’t do this the hard way, you’re just wasting your time or that analog (your own handwriting) is the only way to learn. Once again, I couldn’t disagree more.

When we spend more time reading, thinking, and writing, we learn—period. Note that I’m not saying don’t write by hand—do it when you want to—but ultimately, a digital Zettlekasten is the most useful and, more importantly, the most possible to build and use.

I can’t leave this topic without mentioning this little gem from Scheper-

“It’s not a tool for capturing unprocessed information and storing it for a later period of time.” (Scott P. Scheper, Antinet Zettelkasten)

YES IT IS! That’s precisely what it is! When I’m reading, I don’t want to stop to think about every idea I find interesting. I find it more efficient and more interesting to review my notes later – more on this again under workflow.

For a brief review of several digital options, see Appendix A at the end of this article.

Deciding What to Read

Again, the available literature about building a Zettelkasten emphasizes the need to read quality material. I’ll quote Scheper again. 

The first step is “careful selection of materials.” That is, carefully selecting books worth reading.

While I don’t want to suggest you read garbage all the time, I strongly suggest that you read what you want to read and what supports your interests and intentions. This is your Zettelkasten for you to use as you wish. It’s your time and your mind. If you choose to make notes from a trashy romance novel that you find compelling, that’s okay.

That said, I didn’t build my Zettlekasten to support my fiction reading.

Collecting and Selecting

I’ve highlighted over 50 excerpts from Scheper’s book – not because I find them so compelling, but rather because I disagree so strongly! Now these don’t necessarily make it into my Zettelkasten – but they do make it into my Readwise list – a key component in my Zettelkasten workflow.

“What we are looking for are facts and information that can add something and therefore enrich the slip-box.” (Sönke Ahrens, How to Take Smart Notes)

Uh, oh, I disagree again. But, I have to say both the authors I like and the ones I don’t like, so pretty universally, say that we need to always be thinking about making connections.

I disagree, at least in the beginning. If you’re reading what you want to read, as I recommend. And highlighting whatever you want to highlight, as I also recommend, your notes will naturally reflect your interests and the things you are reading about. We all tend to hover around the books that are about the things we are interested in. Our notes will obviously reflect those interests. Using indexes and categories that are specific to you and what you’re doing will allow the connections to be made when you need them.

We’re looking for thoughts and new ideas we want to remember – the slip-box connections should take care of themselves.

https://zettelkasten.de/posts/overview/#the-introduction-to-the-zettelkasten-method

*Update: Since I wrote that, my method has evolved, and I now have Book Notes, Article Notes, Blog Notes and, My Notes.

Decisive

A book about? by Chip and Dan Heath

I finished reading Decisive in June of 2022 – I highlighted a lot while reading this book. On a scale of 1 to 5 I’d call this book a 4 – but I’d need to think about what would make it a 5.

Highlights from My Reading

Loss Aversion

“researchers have found again and again that people act as though losses are from two to four times more painful than gains are pleasurable.”

Thinking Fast and Slow – Daniel Kahneman

Reflections and Random Thoughts

Jan 18, 2025


Continuing my read of Thinking, Fast and Slow via the Shortform summary, I came across a discussion that essentially debunks the concept of priming. The summary notes that even the author, Daniel Kahneman, admitted to having relied too heavily on results from experiments that lacked sufficient rigor—yet he remains a believer in the concept. I wouldn’t have known this without reading the summary, though I imagine there’s plenty written about it elsewhere. And, I wouldn’t have realized that I had completely bought into the theory of priming myself—not sure if I was introduced to it in this book or at some earlier time.


Insights

Key Take-Aways

System 1 automatically generates suggestions, feelings, and intuitions for System 2. If endorsed by System 2, intuitions turn into beliefs, and impulses turn into voluntary actions.

This summary was provided ShortForm

Something Actionable

My rating of this book is not based on the quality of its writing or content but rather on how practical and valuable it has been in my life.

Review Title

What Everyone Else Thinks

I started reading Thinking Fast and Slow in Dec of 2022 – it was recommended by Chip & Dan Heath in their book Decisive – in fact, they called it essential reading.

“… our recommended decision books, but to understand the problems we face in making decisions, essential reading would include Daniel Kahneman’s book, Thinking, Fast and Slow, mentioned above, and Dan Ariely’s Predictably Irrational. One of the handful of books that provides advice on making decisions better is Nudge by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein, which was written for “choice architects” in business and government who construct decision systems such as retirement plans or organ-donation policies. It has been used to improve government policies in the United States, Great Britain, and other countries.” (Chip Heath, Dan Heath, Decisive)

It’s also on Nassim Taleb’s list of 25 Best Non-Fiction books of all time – which you can find on Medium here.

While I’ve gotten some value from this book I’m not enjoying the read.

March 26, 2023

So, I dislike reading this book enough that I’ve committed myself to reading it daily for 10 minutes until I’ve finished it. The gist of the five pages I read seems to be that 1. Preference for the status quo is a consequence of loss aversion, and loss aversion is built into the “automatic evaluations” of what he calls system 1, which I believe (I still get confused on this point) is our subconscious thought process.

This is one of the reasons I dislike this book. System 1 and System 2 – why make up new terms for commonly understood terms? System 1 is for the subconscious, and system 2 is for the conscious; what’s the point? It just makes the book hard to understand. I have to keep thinking about what the terms mean rather than what he is trying to say. Very annoying.

March 28, 2023

As usual, I barely understand what I’m reading. This 10 or maybe 15 minutes was a discussion about the perception of fairness and reference points in economics. And a brief discussion of “altruistic punishment.” The tendency of one stranger to punish another for what they perceive to be unfair behavior. i.e., refusing to purchase from a store perceived to be “gouging.”

Seriously hate this book.

April 2, 2023

I’ve started counting the number of times this author tells the reader what they are thinking – seriously can’t get thru a 10 minute reading without another instance of him saying “you just thought…” – this is one of the most unreadable popular books I’ve ever tried to get through.

I leave room for the possibility that I will feel differently about it with a second read, but I doubt I can get through a second read. I downloaded a summary from Ninja Reads – perhaps that will help.

July 1, 2024

This book is referenced in so many of the books I’ve read since – I’m going to make a list of them here.

  • Decisive
  • Wait – Frank Partnoy

The Practice – Seth Godin

“Ship creative work. On a schedule. Without attachment and without reassurance.” (Seth Godin, The Practice)

I bought this on Audible a few days ago. It was recommended by a business associate. I’ll read anything Seth Godin writes and this book doesn’t disappoint. Most often I listen to Audible when I’m going to sleep. So I purchased the Kindle version as well.

March 26, 2023 9:56 am

I am obsessed with and inspired by this book.

From My Zettlekasten

“If you want to create your work, it might pay to turn off your wi-fi for a day. To sit with your tools and your boundaries and your process and nothing else.” (Seth Godin, The Practice)

The Dark Hours

Author Michael Connelly

Copyright 2021

I started this book March 8th 2023, I have it in hardcover and I probably got it from my dad. I know I didn’t buy it. I do this kind of reading when I eat lunch – so it takes a minute to finish a book.

April 2, 2023

I finished reading this book yesterday. As usual easy and enjoyable read. It has almost 60,000 reviews on Amazon, with an accumulated rating of 4.6 stars. What else needs to be said?

Void Moon

Michael Connelly

Copyright 2017

I read this in early March 2023. One of my favorites so far. I’ve been hung up on Michael Connelly novels for a couple of years. When I had Covid probably Jan 2020 a friend brought me The Lincoln Lawyer, I’d seen the movie but hadn’t thought of reading him. I’ve read five or six of them now.

Again this is not a book review site. Rather it’s me documenting my reading. Something I wish I started long ago.

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