Making better use of Kindle Highlights 1


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I love how easy it is to store highlights on Kindle. Swipe and that’s it.

But I hate how hard it is to then do something meaningful with those highlights. Getting them “out of Amazon” is a pig, and I wonder sometimes if I should just go back to my old ways – dog ear pages and then at the end of the book copy out the passages that I’d thought were interesting.

Readwise

Readwise has done great work trying to make accessing those highlights easier. They have one Inbox service I really like that runs through all your highlights you’ve ever made, picks a few. and then sends them to you in a daily email. It’s still not particularly targeted, though, and it still doesn’t really help reflection. In theory, with all these notes stored digitally, reflection should have been given a huge boost. The more I think about it, though, the more I find reflection to be the bit of my mental life that gets harmed most by digital technology. It’s too easy online both to let others do the thinking for you or to follow others down rabbit holes of “what is important”.

Roam Research

Thankfully, Readwise has also made some steps to help by allowing you to export the notes easily to other services. (The Kindle/Amazon combo again makes far harder than it should be). A service that I’m interested in tying into is Roam Research, in part because it’s the closest I’ve seen to how I used to write essays. (Make lots of notes of things that seem interesting, vaguely relevant; tag those notes with broad themes; organise those themes into an argument of sorts; and then begin).  There’s an overview in the video here

And a whole stack of tutorials online at places like RoamBrain. I’m a beginner with it but I thought I’d document the process I go through in case it’s of help to someone else.

I’ll link to how I did the steps when I’ve worked them out but in terms of process, I’m looking at:

In terms of projects, I’m curious to see what the common themes are in the various leadership, organisational structure, internal comms books I’ve read are. It’s by no means academically rigorous – more just for me to feel I’m doing some grown-up reflection rather than vapid flicking through books.