No app. No tablet. No setup. Just a notebook, a pen, and seven practices.
You tried Notion. Then Obsidian. Then Logseq, Roam, Apple Notes, Linear, Jira, whatever replaced those last month. You spent a Sunday afternoon setting one up: tags, templates, linked databases. By Wednesday you were maintaining the tool instead of doing the work. The tool became the project.
And your mind is not quieter.
That’s the problem this book solves. Not “how to organize your notes.” How to stop carrying everything in your head.
The answer is counterintuitive, low-tech, and it works: write more, on paper, by hand.
Why paper works when apps didn’t
Handwriting is slower than typing, slower than thinking. That’s the feature. It forces a pass through the part of your brain that turns a vague swirl into words that mean something. You’re not taking notes. You’re forcing your own thinking to become legible.
Once it’s on the page, you can forget it. The notebook remembers. Your head gets quieter. That’s the whole mechanism, and there’s a page explaining why it works if you want the longer version.
Try this right now
Four minutes. Pen and paper.
Write everything that’s on your mind, in one line, separated by slashes: merge the PR / reply to Dan in #incidents / figure out why staging is broken / that design doc / dentist / the thing you said in standup that came out wrong.
No order. No hierarchy. Just get it out of your head and onto the page.
Walk away for five minutes. Come back and reread what you wrote.
That’s the smallest possible version of the method. If it didn’t do something for you, keep scrolling. If it did, the seven practices are here.
If you build software, manage engineers, or spend your days in pull requests and project trackers, this method was written with your kind of overwhelm in mind.
What real pages look like
[photo: table of contents — CAPTION PLACEHOLDER: Craig writes a first-person, past-tense caption specific to this page. 12–25 words. Shape: what’s visible + time elapsed + what it became.]
[photo: idea gardening — CAPTION PLACEHOLDER: Craig writes a first-person, past-tense caption specific to this page. 12–25 words. Shape: what’s visible + time elapsed + what it became.]
[photo: flagging — CAPTION PLACEHOLDER: Craig writes a first-person, past-tense caption specific to this page. 12–25 words. Shape: what’s visible + time elapsed + what it became.]
Real pages from real notebooks. Messy, useful, in daily use. The book shows more of these with the specific moves that make each practice work.
The book
Hand-Write. Think Better. is a 40-page PDF. One sitting to read, a shelf of notebooks to practice. It walks through all seven practices with real examples from my notebooks: worked pages, the specific moves, and what to do when you get stuck.
$19. Less than one of the notebooks the method teaches you to fill.
Or start free
The Quick Reference is the entire method on a single printable page. Enter your email and I’ll send the PDF, plus a handful of short notes over the next ten weeks drawn from my blog.