Question
How do I practice connected notes?
Quick Answer
Open your note system and pick any ten recent atomic notes. For each note, ask: what other note does this one support, contradict, extend, or depend on? Create at least one explicit link from each note to another. When you are done, you should have at least ten new connections that did not exist.
The most direct way to practice connected notes is through a focused exercise: Open your note system and pick any ten recent atomic notes. For each note, ask: what other note does this one support, contradict, extend, or depend on? Create at least one explicit link from each note to another. When you are done, you should have at least ten new connections that did not exist before. Now look at one of those notes through its links. Notice how the note means more in context than it did in isolation — the same content, but richer because of its neighbors.
Common pitfall: Creating atomic notes and filing them into folders by topic, then never linking them to anything. The notes are technically self-contained, but they function as isolated fragments because nothing connects them. You end up with a well-organized graveyard: everything is in its place, nothing is in conversation with anything else. The absence of links makes atomicity feel pointless — you conclude the method doesn't work, when the real problem is that you built nodes without edges.
This practice connects to Phase 2 (Atomicity and Decomposition) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons