IDEAS
Ideas
How Jordan Carrillo’s Move to Chivas Reflects the Power of Letting Go to Gain Clarity
Why John Smoltz’s Take on Baseball Analytics Mirrors the Pitfalls of Over-Classifying Idea Notes
What Cardi B’s Rap Feud Teaches Us About Letting Go of Certain Ideas to Sharpen the Ones That Matter
How the Patriots’ Romeo Doubs Move Teaches Us to Manage Idea Fragments Without Overload
Clarence Thomas and the Alabama Redistricting Case: A Nietzschean Reflection on Power, Illusion, and the Stakes We Choose
Why Moving Swiftly on Ideas Matters: Lessons from Jack Schlossberg’s Political Push
Why Over-Classifying Idea Notes Can Make Creative Thinking Weaker: A Lesson from Spike Lee’s Brooklyn Spirit
From Tennis Scores Today to Star Wars Dreams: What Unfinished Games Teach Us About Ambition
Why Over-Classifying Idea Notes Can Weaken Creative Thinking: Lessons from the Precision of F1
Authors
Meet the three writers behind these notes
Emily writes from the quiet emotional reason a note gets kept in the first place. Her voice is gentle and reflective, and she prefers clarity that feels human rather than polished for its own sake. She is the author who slows things down just enough to make the feeling behind a memo visible.
View profile
Owen likes to separate signal from noise without making the writing feel cold. He tends to bring structure, momentum, and a practical sense of direction to a messy idea. His pieces are usually concise, modern, and quietly upbeat.
View profile
Claire writes with warmth, wit, and a little literary tension. She often starts with everyday clutter, irritation, or overthinking, then turns it into a clearer and more memorable observation. Her writing tries to feel vivid without becoming heavy.
View profile