Living with ADHD and OCD means periodically I develop (and get overly-excited over) a new, elaborate organization system that I somehow, foolishly, believe will last forever.

However, this week I’ve got a tremendous new system that I think may last forever!


The Tremendous Development!


You can now write and preserve data in a physical, human-readable format that’s immune to hard drive failures! And it’s like, right there in front of you so you’re less likely to forget about it!

pog-dolphin

But the best part is…


These Don’t Suck!


Remember these 99 cent bois from grade school?

Garbage.

But TankieTanuki, those are the cheapest ones, which means they’re the notebooks of The People!

No. Full stop. Don’t even.

blob-no

You’re an adult. Your thoughts are worth preserving. These aren’t diamond-encrusted—it’s like paying twice as much for the boots that last ten times as long. These were not expensive: The A6 ones were about $3.00 each and the A5 were $5.50.

Do you think Stalin’s commissars were recording state grain quotas on those shitty McJournals where the spiral falls out the fourth time you open it and the ink bleeds through three pages at a time?

No.

Stalin would have shot your ass for doing a shitty job and you’d have deserved it.


Cool Features


  • Thick Paper stalin-feels-good

  • Hardback

The book is its own clipboard! Vegan leather (aka plastic lol shrug-outta-hecks ). Bound securely with string ‘n’ stuff.

  • Adorably Smol

A5 for studying. A6 for writing down bit ideas or memos.

  • That’s right. Those are mother-fucking DOTS on those pages!

You can draw technical shit like tables better because of the vertical guides, but it’s less conspicuous than grid/graph paper.

  • PAGE NUMBERS!!? You better believe it. Leverage the power of INDEXING!

Also the red A6 one looks like Quotations from Mao Zedong.


I may start getting into fountain pens now. Lord, help me. inshallah

    • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      I literally have no system. I’m just jotting down tons of stuff. But it’s still useful, because:

      1. just the process of writing it down seems to help clarify and organize a thought
      2. I look back several pages a few times a day and actually glance at what I wrote down. Then it’s like “oh right, I need to do that, that had completely left my mind until I read this”
      • TankieTanuki [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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        3 months ago

        this

        Maybe the best system is to have no system. If I had a rigid system I would have to think before I wrote on the pad, rather than think with the pad.