AardvarkGoodSwimmer wrote:
I like peace activism and politics. Sometimes at public speeches I'll take messy notes, mainly just for the purpose of staying alert. But if I look at them within the next day, it kind of refreshes my memory.
So, what if, in zen like fashion, you allow your notes to remain messy and incomplete, that you go with the flow in this regard. And then, perhaps at the beginning of the next class, you skim through these circling things you may want to look up further?
The problem is, my notes are so incomplete that it's very hard to even call them "notes". They lack entire sub-topics, they mostly consist of the first 1-2 words of every sentence.
They look something like this:
"Only if
Very important, because,
This can be solved by substituting
As we've already seen, these differential equations have two
"
It's virtually impossible to even deduce the sub-topics. Whenever I start writing a sentence, five new ones had been already said. I can't really write down "the most important concepts" from a given speech as many people do. It's an impossible task for me, unless the speech is incredibly slow, and is repeated several times.