This was a really fascinating post. I plan to read the Ethics at some point next year, probably in January. I confess to being a bit scared of it; it looks rather intimidating!
Thank you so much! I can only encourage you on Ethics. It was challenging but worth all the effort. I will definitely revisit it when this project is over.
I tend to take notes by underlining passages and annotating in the actual book. I may also write some thoughts on a notepad. Once I am finished with a book I transcribe my notes into a journal I keep for that purpose.
I'll bet that journal is a treasure! I do a little bit of underlining and annotating but those notes never made it any further than that. Do you go back and look at your notes when you are reading other things, to make connections?
Occasionally I will sit down with the notebook and read through past entries and draw connections. I refer to it frequently when I am writing as a reference of sorts.
I was served up an ad to Antinet by a very insightful Instagram algorithm. For a long time I've made notes to myself on index cards but they've always been so disorganized. I am absolutely not a digital note-taker (I've tried) so this idea of a way to organize my thoughts in a hands-on way was appealing. It's a work in progress but it's interesting, and it has also helped me focus my reading better. That, I really like.
And Lord, I hear you on the sales funnels. Sometimes I wonder if Russell Brunson didn't ruin the internet.
This was a really fascinating post. I plan to read the Ethics at some point next year, probably in January. I confess to being a bit scared of it; it looks rather intimidating!
Thank you so much! I can only encourage you on Ethics. It was challenging but worth all the effort. I will definitely revisit it when this project is over.
I tend to take notes by underlining passages and annotating in the actual book. I may also write some thoughts on a notepad. Once I am finished with a book I transcribe my notes into a journal I keep for that purpose.
I'll bet that journal is a treasure! I do a little bit of underlining and annotating but those notes never made it any further than that. Do you go back and look at your notes when you are reading other things, to make connections?
Occasionally I will sit down with the notebook and read through past entries and draw connections. I refer to it frequently when I am writing as a reference of sorts.
I was served up an ad to Antinet by a very insightful Instagram algorithm. For a long time I've made notes to myself on index cards but they've always been so disorganized. I am absolutely not a digital note-taker (I've tried) so this idea of a way to organize my thoughts in a hands-on way was appealing. It's a work in progress but it's interesting, and it has also helped me focus my reading better. That, I really like.
And Lord, I hear you on the sales funnels. Sometimes I wonder if Russell Brunson didn't ruin the internet.