Why You Should Consider A Journal (A Commonplace Book)
I found what a commonplace book was by accident. I remember a discussion with friends on how to get the most out of the books we read. For me, it was about taking notes and creating short summaries. And this practice worked beyond books.
That’s what a commonplace book is — a place where you store anything that is valuable to you for later revision. I explain it better in this article.
Authors like Ryan Holiday and Robert Greene are very passionate about this practice. They believe it should be done in a physical way:
Actually writing the stuff down is crucial. I know it’s easier to keep a Google Doc or an Evernote project of your favorite quotes…but easy has got nothing to do with this.
Says Holiday. I get that and I share the understanding. But not everyone can afford it. When you want a new habit to stick it needs to be easy. And that is what digital brings to the table.
For professionals, a digital commonplace book may look like cutting corners. But for the rest of us, digital is the best starting point. Even when physical outperforms digital in some aspects.
The best of both worlds
As Hans Rosling put it in his book, Factfulnesss:
We love to dichotomize. Good versus bad. Heroes versus villains. My country versus the rest. Dividing the world into two distinct sides is simple and intuitive, and also dramatic because it implies conflict, and we do it without thinking, all the time.
That is most of the advice I’ve read. But why can’t we use the best of both worlds? If I want to keep the habit of commonplacing in the long run, I need to have a good system in place.
When it comes to collect, review or connect ideas, a
digital
system
However, easy and scalable has nothing to do with physical. I don’t see myself re-arranging, restoring or carrying on my physical commonplace book. After just a few years, your commonplace book could take up half the space in your closet.
Here I listed some of the benefits of digital:
- 24/7 Availability
- Full-text search
- Cross-device sync
- Easy to curate and edit
- Easy to review
- Easy to share
- Easy to connect
- Easy to backup
What
how
Commonplacing is one of the most productive habits a person can have and requires time and effort. Digital makes it less scary for most of us.
Make better use of your phone and use it to collect and review anything, anytime, anywhere.
So, What is a commonplace book?
For a long time, people needed sharing their interests and passions. During the Renaissance, it was a big deal among the top intellectuals. Philosophers like Francis Bacon and John Locke had journals that served to collect thoughts, experiences and moments of reflection. They were personal diaries written for a small audience of friends and family.
The roman stoic philosopher Seneca the Younger was the first to mention the practice of commonplacing:
We also, I say, ought to copy these bees, and sift whatever we have gathered from a varied course of reading, for such things are better preserved if they are kept separate; then, by applying the supervising care with which our nature has endowed us, in other words, our natural gifts, we should so blend those several flavours into one delicious compound that, even though it betrays its origin, yet it nevertheless is clearly a different thing from that whence it came.
What was true centuries ago it is still today. Social media platforms allow us to share all anything from personal experiences to someone else content.
A commonplace book is where you store anything valuable to you, from quotes, notes, and thoughts to anecdotes and experiences.
They are repositories of knowledge, experiences, and self-improvement.
Ryan Holiday explains in his article what a commonplace book is:
A commonplace book is a central resource or depository for ideas, quotes, anecdotes, observations and information you come across during your life and didactic pursuits.
This practice is a form of self-definition. A reflection of your character and personality. The subjects you are passionate about and the ones you ignore.
What you chose to share says a lot about you.
The benefits
We spend hours consuming a massive amount of content every day. Unfortunately, our minds can’t absorb everything we want. If you don’t attempt to save valuable information it is easy to overlook what resonates with you.
Here are the benefits I found critical:
- Learning: It makes easier the review of themes or topics. You saved valuable information to use in the future.
- Creativity: it helps you synthesize information quicker. Creative thinking comes from connecting disparate ideas from different areas of knowledge.
- Organization: It helps you categorize your knowledge base. This saves you a ton of time when looking for answers.
- Introspection: It can help you reflect on yourself. If you are facing a moment of self-doubt, this can be a manifest of who you are.
- Compound effect: It helps you build your knowledge base. After years, every piece of information, no matter how small, adds up.
Over time, you will document your world-view and how you understand things. A true masterpiece worth sharing.
Keeping a commonplace book is an essential system for learning and creative thinking. Like the stoic philosopher Epictetus once said:
Don’t just say you have read books. Show that through them you have learned to think better, to be a more discriminating and reflective person. Books are the training weights of the mind.
Want to learn more about commonplacing? Check Why you should consider a digital commonplace book.