Miranda & StickyNoteSoul
I’ve been noticing how people arrange their sticky notes around a workspace—there seems to be a hidden logic behind the pattern. Do you think there’s a deeper structure to that way of organizing information?
Yeah, there is. People tend to cluster notes by priority, theme, or proximity to related tools. The layout usually reflects a mental map of tasks—high‑priority items at eye level, related items grouped together, and less urgent stuff pushed to the margins. Over time you’ll see a visual hierarchy that mirrors how your brain processes the workload. If you can spot that hierarchy, you can tweak it to make the flow more efficient.
That makes a lot of sense—like the brain is doing its own kind of note‑taking, arranging everything so it’s easier to jump between related ideas. Do you ever notice when a note gets pushed to the margin because it feels less urgent, even if it’s actually pretty important? It can be a subtle hint that your own priorities might need a little reshuffling.
Exactly. The brain often pushes less urgent‑looking items to the margin, even if they're critical. It’s a cue that your mental map might be skewed. Check the notes that feel “extraordinary” but sit at the edge—they’re probably more important than you think. Re‑evaluate and bring those to the center.
That sounds like a good cue—just a quick scan of the edge notes, see if any feel like hidden gems that deserve the spotlight. A subtle shift can reveal a lot.