Writing

Ugly Outlines, Clean Drafts

Introduction: Why “Ugly” Wins

I’ve fallen into the trap more times than I care to admit: sitting down to “outline” an idea, I open Notion or Obsidian or some new flavor-of-the-week outlining tool. Ten minutes later, I’m fiddling with nested bullets, collapsing toggles, and dragging things around like I’m arranging furniture in a dollhouse. I’m no closer to writing. In fact, I’m further away.

Digital tools invite polish too early. Paper invites motion. There’s a difference. One demands structure; the other forgives mess. That’s why I’ve learned to reach for an index card or a notebook when an idea starts tugging at me. The uglier the outline, the faster the draft.

One Card, Three Decisions

Objective

Show how one physical card simplifies the morning: capture → choose → commit.


The Scene: Coffee, Pen, Card

Most mornings, I start in the same quiet ritual: the coffee is hot, the house is barely awake, and in front of me sits a single 3x5 index card. Not a glowing rectangle, not a notification-laden dashboard—just paper. I write the date in the top corner, a small heading for the day, and then leave space for three lines.

North Star in the Wild: One Busy Day, Start to Finish

This isn’t a system tour. It’s the day I wrote this post.

No industry drama. No jargon. Just me, a pen, a single card, and the usual digital noise trying to pull a simple piece of writing off the rails. I used my North Star the way I designed it—paper to decide, server to remember—and paid attention to where it actually saved the work.

If you want the nuts-and-bolts behind this approach, read the North Star roadmap (the “how it works” piece). For now, pull up a chair and watch the day unfold.