What to read? Big questions as filter and frame (Part 7)

 This is part seven of a series on tackling wants, managing my media diet, and finding enough. Each post stands alone. See the introduction on “the mindset of more” for links to all posts in the series.

Social media and streaming subscriptions encourage us to gorge on the glut of information (Harjas Sandhu describes “hoarding type scrolling” that sounds veeeery familiar), promising that the algorithm will feed us the best. Instead of helping us practice discernment, corporate platforms offer us an all-you-can-eat buffet of candy. Yet as Olga Koutseridi writes, “low-quality info is designed to leave us craving more instead of leaving us feeling satisfied.” We keep eating and eating, but there’s nothing of substance to sustain us.

I think curiosity is innately good, and that there’s value in learning about many aspects of the world for no more reason than that it is interesting. At the same time, I have limited time and capacity for thinking — I need some sort of filter for what to read, especially as I make efforts to slow my pace. The morass of information online is what brought us algorithmic curation and now pushes genAI — but corporate algorithms encourage rage and polarization and create “curiosity ruts”, so I avoid them.

How can I create my own mental algorithm for choosing what to read?

For me, reading and blogging are interconnected; what I read influences what I write about. I’m working on flipping that around, with the goal that what I want to write about determines what I readBut how to decide what to write about, if not by what I read?

What I’m trying is using my Big Questions as a structure for curiosity, a way to practice more intentionality in what I spend my time thinking about. I’ve been working on this for a few years, but I feel like I’m getting a better handle on it now.

tl;dr I’m basically doing research projects for fun 😉

Since I started this experiment, I’ve noticed I’m less driven to read random stuff online because I’m so excited about this playful approach to reading. The carrot method — giving myself exciting things to think about — has worked way better than the stick method of deleting my feed reader from my phone so that the only thing I had to read was my Read Later app, which instead drove me to read the Bluesky and mastodon.social Discover feeds (do not recommend) in a desperate quest for novelty and news. Glad I dodged that becoming a habit 🙌

The Big Questions framing

I got the framing of Big Questions at an Oliver Burkeman workshop. I recall it as a tangential mention but it immediately sent me spinning. As simple an idea as it is to identify some key overarching questions in your life, sometimes we need to put a name to something to really get it.

Anne-Laure Le Cunff recounts advice Richard Feynman gave “to keep a dozen of your favorite problems constantly present in your mind,” and describes favorite problems as “a curiosity engine”:

Your favorite problems form a prism that separates incoming information into a spectrum of ideas — a frame that allows you to deliberately filter distractions, direct your attention, and nurture your curiosity.

Last year, I wanted to do more self-directed writing, but it was challenging not to be reactive. This year, I’m discovering that self-guided reading is the other half of the equation.

Big questions give me a reason to seek rather than simply receive, and are broad enough to provide direction without constraint.

Turning directed curiosity into big questions

Reading towards questions gives purpose to my curiosity. Curiosity comes in two styles: receptive and directed. Receptive curiosity is openness to learning; directed curiosity is more active, and invites you deeper. Allen Pike observes that the internet primarily serves our receptive curiosity:

By occasionally picking things to go deep on, you balance out the otherwise broad information diet we all get by default by being on the internet, consuming media, and just kind of being a modern human.

My big questions coalesced out of my receptive curiosity reading; I identified my first big questions in 2023 by reflecting on what I’d been thinking and writing about and looking for overarching themes. I first listed off a bunch of smaller questions within that theme, then worked backwards to find a bigger question uniting them all. Defining these questions made me enunciate for myself exactly what it was I was wondering, a process I found helpful in itself.

Last fall, I realized that my big questions didn’t align with my main interests anymore, so I created a few new ones and retired a couple. Updating my big question pages a couple-three times a year also nudges me to notice which questions I’ve been neglecting and might like to put some attention towards, or retire.

Big questions are a self-created tool that serves my thinking, not the other way around. I don’t treat them as a boundary to my curiosity, but can expand or add to my questions when I need. The questions are big enough to keep exploring within for a year or more, still offering plenty of the novelty I crave. I think of the Big Questions as high level themes, and blog posts as a way to explore sub-questions within them.

How this changes my reading

The feed reader and beyond

I subscribe to a ton of feeds, ever-changing, which showers me in riches of information that satisfy my broad curiosity, some directly from topical blogs and some shared by cool people. Earlier this year, I reoriented the way I think of the topic-specific blogs and newsletters I follow, and moved them from my blogroll page onto my big question pages. It’s now easier for me to unfollow and refollow topical feeds as my focus shifts between questions.

I’ve also been more proactive in seeking out online articles related to my questions — I’ve been using Search My Site, Marginalia Search, and appending Reddit to DDG searches to seek out opinions and recommendations. These smaller, weirder information pools yield some intriguing results. (There are so many personal websites out there guys!)

Choosing not to read *good* online content

Marco Giancotti points out that weeding out the bad stuff isn’t the hard part of deciding what to read (emphasis mine):

Filtering out spam and slop is relatively easy with the right tools and a little thought, at least at an emotional level.

The much tougher job, I think, is giving up on things that would be good, meaningful, fulfilling, and useful in order to do things that are even more so—or, to be precise, to do things that are better aligned with what I really care about right now. The hard part is dealing with the fact that, whatever I may try, I will never get to do the vast majority of those amazing activities.

I’m of two minds here: I don’t want to ignore everything that isn’t immediately useful, but recognize that I read a lot of things that leave me with nothing more than “cool🤷‍♀️” (or political stuff that ties me in a knot of nerves and anger). I don’t want to fall prey to utilitarianism, reading only what has a tangible, immediate takeaway, but also find I do get more satisfaction from going deep.

Oliver Burkeman writes about accepting our finitude in Four Thousand Weeks, commenting (emphasis mine):

“Social media is a giant machine for getting you to spend your time caring about the wrong things, but for the same reason, it’s also a machine for getting you to care about too many things, even if they’re each indisputably worthwhile.”

I cannot care about everything, and trying to prevents me from going deep on the things I care most about. Wendell Berry puts it: “To know some things well is to know other things not so well, or not at all. Knowledge is always surrounded by ignorance.”

Accepting my own interests

I use my Read Later app as the filter point between my shoulds and my interests; everything I encounter online and want to read gets saved there. I tag articles with key topics and themes (including “mindset of more” for articles related to this series) to let me see only articles related to my questions. When a bit of time has passed from saving the article and I am less emotionally invested, I can more easily let go of the things that I imagine “someone like me” ought to read. Looking into these “should” articles often exposes tender spots of (typically unwarranted) inadequacy, or what-if’s around choices long since made.

What this ultimately requires is self-knowledge and self-acceptance — to release our imagined selves and “navigate by aliveness.” We must not judge our own curiosities as unworthy, or torment ourselves that we ought to be different people than we are. Whatever we are interested in, however idiosyncratic, holds meaning for us, and that’s what counts.

Curating reading lists

After reading around a question for a while online, I start to get a better feel for where I should dig in to books. The internet primarily produces breadth, but books offer depth.

In the past, I would pick a single book as representative of a topic I was broadly curious about and call it good. Now, I’m going more research-style, collecting a stack of books on the same topic, knowing full well that I won’t read them all*.

I start off by browse-searching the library catalog for books related to a question that’s been niggling at me — this spring one has been: in the age of generative AI, what’s the value in craftsmanship? — and collecting potential titles into a list. Of course, I have my own answer to this question, but the meaning of making can be a tricky thing to describe, so I wanted to see how others have done so, and explore some different angles:

  • What’s the value of art and craftsmanship to the creator, to the receiving audience, to society?
  • How have we dealt with similar challenges to craftsmanship in the past, and how is generative AI different?
  • What do artists, writers, academics, craftspeople think?
  • What is craft, and how do we learn it? How is what generative AI does different than what human creators are doing?

I try to keep the lists generously open-ended — since these are library books I don’t have to pay for, I have nothing to lose from trying something a bit out there besides a bit of time. (I had been keeping a single list with all my questions crammed together but have finally taken the time to separate them out 😉) Art books, poetry, memoirs, all fair game. Celine Nguyen observes, “Research as a leisure activity isn’t constrained by these disciplinary fiefdoms and schisms. Any discipline can offer interesting ideas, tools, techniques.” I’m trying to turn my “ooh?” energy towards intriguing books than enticing online articles.

When I’m requesting books from the library (we get free holds — 25 on ebooks and I’ve never hit the limit on physical), I skim through the library list and try to think about which would be most helpful to read next based on where my thinking is now. (This is also influenced by what has a wait list.) Although I like reading fiction as an ebook, I prefer to read non-fiction in hard copy. I benefit from having a non-fiction book in sight — it’s easy for non-fiction ebooks to get pushed below the digital fold so I forget I have them borrowed — and a due date so I actually get around to reading it 😉

Although I’m reading the book or article towards a particular theme, I’ll still write down unrelated connections — if I can’t use it for the post at top of mind, it might apply to a future question or post. Despite starting off with a vague idea of the question I’m getting at, I find that my original question often shifts and becomes more compelling, and I develop new questions. I’ll write more than one blog post, and explore more than one question, based on what I’ve been reading this spring and summer.

How I’ve been choosing books to read

Here’s a demonstration of my selections across four library runs (you’ll see I’m still grabbing books for entertainment, other interests, and broad curiosity, but also focusing on a particular topic):

stack of 8 library books, two on writing craft, three on the arts and crafts movement
In April, I decided to dig into the Arts and Crafts movement as a historic example of valuing handiwork. I started with In Harmony with Nature, an art-style book about Arts & Crafts gardens that offered an introduction, then read The Arts and Crafts Movement, which gave me just what I was looking for: quotes from the founders of the movement about what craftsmanship meant to them. Dangerous Fictions offered a slightly different angle on interrogating the function of art in culture, especially difficult art. I drew on the Arts & Crafts background for my blog post about the Business Borg.
stack of library books that includes six books related to the mindset of more series
My early May library haul had four books loosely related to AI / craftsmanship (American Book Design and William Morris, Deep Dream, More Than Words, and Changing the Subject) and two related more broadly to the “mindset of more” theme (Possessed and The Plenitude of Distraction). I dipped into American Book Design, decided it was more technical than I wanted, and fully read More Than Words, which directly compared writing with generative AI text, and Plenitude for an exploration of leisurely thinking and “unproductive” behavior.
flatlay of 7 library books related to cultural elites and the creative class
My late May library haul focused on cultural elites and impacts on the creative class. I read Pretentiousness, which advocated for the value of pushing artistic boundaries, and The Crisis of Culture, which connected better to a different question I was thinking about 😉 I rejected The Meaning in the Making and read a review of Elite Capture that made me think their definition of elite wasn’t what I was looking for. After skimming the table of contents for Culture Crash, I decided it wasn’t getting at the interesting part of the question for me, so my reading time would be better spent elsewhere.
stack of 9 library books, including 6 related to blog posts
For my early June library haul, I wanted to follow a thread of interest on identity politics, so I grabbed The Class Matrix and The Case Against the Professional Managerial Class. I also borrowed four more related to the AI / craftsmanship question: What We See When We Read, The Art of Slow Writing, The AI Mirror, and Unmasking AI. I read all of What We See, digging into what’s actually happening while we are reading. The introduction to The Class Matrix made me realize it was more advanced theory than I was prepared to read. Based on time limitations, I decided the AI books weren’t a priority.

When writing is the point of your notes — when informing your writing is the goal behind reading — Richard Griffiths proposes that it’s most useful to “develop a concept of your intended output before you start reading a book. That way, your interests will fruitfully guide your reading and note-making.” I do this by periodically ducking into my collecting grounds (draft blog post) for a particular question and developing a starter outline of declarative statements. I organize the material I’ve already collected (initially from online readings) into those headings, then continue to read more based on the parts of my argument I’m not sold on yet, or where I don’t feel comfortable making a declarative / interesting statement.

Reading with purpose

Sometimes I like to read for the sake of reading, and sometimes I enjoy more purposeful reading. Knowing that I’m planning to write about a question changes how I read by defining my idea space. Instead of reading according to receptive curiosity, I’m using directed curiosity to seek what of the text relates to my question. It makes me pay closer attention to language that I might quote in a blog post.

When I read non-fiction, two levels of interpretation are happening in my mind at the same time: first, I am directly intaking the language and interpreting the author’s intention; at another level, I am processing it analytically and relationally, trying to understand what it means to me. Johan Hari describes it: “If you weren’t letting your mind wander a little bit right now, you wouldn’t really be reading this book in a way that would make sense to you. Having enough mental space to roam is essential for you to be able to understand a book.” This is an unfocused, connective mode of thinking that uses my brain’s default mode network. I use reading non-fiction as a commitment to spend time thinking about a subject; the book itself is a tool towards that.

When I read towards a question, I concentrate my connection-making within that question space, but it remains loose. I am reading for ideas, not information per se, so the dialogue between me and the book is what matters. Roland Barthes writes, “[The text] produces, in me, the best pleasure if it manages to make itself heard indirectly; if, reading it, I am led to look up often, to listen to something else.” Just as writing doesn’t only look like typing, reading doesn’t only look like rapt attention to the page. A big question offers a frame for my reading, like the viewfinder of a camera; framing is a way of sense-making.

 

Further reading:

How Small-Town Public Libraries Enrich the Generative Research Process by Nick Fuller Googins (LitHub)

More search, less feed by Austin Kleon

 

See also:

Choosing between ideas for blog posts

How I approach crafting a blog post

 

Shout-out to James for asking about my Big Questions last December and (eventually) prompting this!

Tracy Durnell

16 Aug 2025 at 19:22

Weeknotes: Aug. 9-15, 2025

 
two speakers at a bookstore event in front of a wall of books
went to hear Annalee Newitz talk about robot rights

Win of the week: trooped up to Lake Forest Park for the book talk — trying to be more willing to do things on weeknights

Looking forward to: started doing a bit of research for a long weekend in Portland this fall! open to suggestions 😉

Stuff I did:

  • 8.75 hours consulting
  • 0.5 hours writing
  • took Friday off work / writing to read a book due back at the library and work on a blog post
  • working on a read-through of my novel draft and ugh got a lot of cleanup to do — only made it through the first 20%
  • baked snickerdoodle blondies — very sweet but not sure it’d be possible to reduce the sugar much — only used a third of the cinnamon sugar topping at least
  • trimmed some blackberries in the back 40
  • alas, tried out Supergoop sunscreen and my skin didn’t like it — a bummer because it felt much less offensive to wear

Dinners:

  • box mac and cheese
  • Thai takeout — peanut sauce, salmon, rice + crab rangoon
  • burritos with soy curls and sauteed bell peppers — decided the soy curls are not our jam
  • Shake Shack — veggie burger + strawberry shake — I was starving at 5pm so instead of having a snack we got fast dinner
  • fish and chips at a local place that is invariably disappointing, which we forget about every three to five years because it’s so conveniently placed beside a nice park 🤷‍♀️
  • Paneer Bhurji + naan + mango chutney + lemonade
  • smoked salmon and leek quiche + roasted potatoes

Reading:

  • Read In the Shadow of the Ship by Aliette de Bodard, The Undercutting of Rosie and Adam by Megan Bannen, and The Prince’s Bride by Charis Michaels
  • Finished reading I Was Abducted by Aliens and Now I’m Trapped in a Rom-Com by Kimberly Lemming and The Crisis of Culture by Olivier Roy
  • DNF’d Abundance by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson (lol couldn’t even make it through the introduction, life’s too short to hate-read dumb shit) and Everyone is Lying to You by Jo Piazza
  • Bought Automatic Noodle by Annalee Newitz and A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna
book open to title page with author's loopy signature and note "go eat!" in orange sharpie, plus a retro fluorescent light style sticker for the titular noodle shop
Never actually gotten a book signed before but the line wasn’t too long so I figured why not 🤷‍♀️

Words I looked up / concepts I learned:

Pretty stuff I saw:

New music I listened to:

Website changes:

  • the security plugins I installed recently broke self-pingbacks so I adjusted the settings

Nature notes:

  • there’s been a chonky little bird hanging out in the bird bath constantly, we think it’s a juvenile because it has no tail feathers
IR photo of one raccoon in a bird bath as a second one climbs up
two raccoons! they both got in the bird bath and circled each other 🦝🦝
IR coyote standing on rock beside fountain looking towards the camera
the camera only picked up this coyote on its way out so I pulled some of the horsetails on the left — hoping the focus will be better on the animals if the plants aren’t there at the perfect focus point — still tweaking the settings on the trail cam too
Tracy Durnell

16 Aug 2025 at 07:52

Planning for a Portland trip

 We’re planning to ride Amtrak down to Portland for my 40th(!) birthday in October, and do a car-free long weekend. I haven’t been to Portland since 2003 and I don’t think my husband’s ever been!

(Open to suggestions! We hate tourist traps and like gardens / parks, outsider art, food with veggie options, science stuff and weird shit.)

Stuff to Do

Maybe?

More my jam than my husband’s:

Food

Logistics

Tracy Durnell

15 Aug 2025 at 22:30

Building out of the mistakes of the past

 I’ve learned a ton about gardening in the past decade plus of owning a house. Gardens are so slow-moving that they’re anchored in our past choices, and don’t represent our current knowledge or skills — but we also can’t develop those skills without trying things, and making some mistakes. Ripping the whole yard out doesn’t make sense because plants grow slowly; I need to work with what exists. Figuring out how to adapt the imperfect is just another element of gardening.

I’ve learned a lot about investing in the past fifteen years. My portfolio reflects some of the things I didn’t know fifteen years ago, ten years ago, five years ago. I put money in the wrong spots, and even when I put it in the right spots I goofed up there sometimes too (I was very proud of myself for putting money into a retirement account early… it took several years to realize I needed to make investments inside the account — that it was just sitting there as cash, depreciating 🤦‍♀️). Sure, it’d be nice if I’d “gotten it right” from the start, but realistically I have to figure out what makes sense based on what I have. Our tax system and retirement rules are convoluted and complex, and I’m doing the best I can given the time I’m willing to spend on it. Money invested imperfectly is better than never having started investing at all.

This reminds me of cathedral thinking — that we need to start building before we know how to build the whole thing.

Sometimes I see leftists yearning to start the US over from scratch, claiming that everything is too fucked to reform, but I don’t know how we could do that without causing massive harm in the transition for precisely the people we most mean to support. I think the sunk cost fallacy doesn’t apply to life quite the same way it does to economics. A country, like a garden, like an investment portfolio, is a perpetual work in progress. We can’t wipe our own slate clean; we are who we are because of our history, imperfect as it is, and getting rid of everything we’ve built so far won’t erase our cultural memory. Some of our laws are stupid, some are cruel, some are outdated… and some are there to protect people. Every time I see a warning label on a product, I think, there’s a story there. Regulations are written in blood.

 

Related reading:

There’s no such thing as a fresh start by Oliver Burkeman

Build a life you can live in by Annie Mueller

Access by a thousand curb cuts by Eric Eggert

Playing in the ruins by Sasha Chapin

“The truth is: you won’t fix the world. You won’t fix them. You won’t fix yourself. And once you stop trying, you may notice that nothing is broken—not in the way you thought.”

 

See also:

Mistakes are part of the learning process

No More Problems

Tracy Durnell

13 Aug 2025 at 18:45

A hierarchy of liberty

 In On Freedom, Timothy Snyder deconstructs liberty into positive and negative liberty. Negative liberty is defensive, assuming that things are blocking you from liberty, and when they are cleared away, you are free. This is the version of liberty embraced by libertarian Americans, who see government as getting in their way. Socialist Americans lean on the side of positive liberty: that there are conditions required for liberty, at the base being life, and thus society needs a strong safety net to keep people safe and healthy. This aligns with Maslow’s hierarchy: one cannot achieve self-actualization without the basic needs of survival being met.

To authoritarians, liberty means the right to impose their will on others. In Against Purity, Alexis Shotwell writes of the importance of classification to authoritarianism: “White supremacist logics intensify the general operation of biopolitical power, requiring standards that can reliably create group differentiation and then group people into discrete and exclusive categories.” This mindset is predicated on a social hierarchy with themselves at top — and it is a small step from thinking you are smarter and stronger than others to believing that they do not deserve a say in how they live. This worldview requires a hierarchy of liberty: their liberty from supersedes others’ liberty to.

They believe that the existence of others outside their own worldview restricts their own liberty. Christian evangelicals act like the slightest exposure to ideas that conflict with their own harms them and their children. “White supremacy is a comprehensive cultural education whose primary function is to prevent people from reading—engaging with, understanding—the lives of people outside its scope,” writes Elaine Castillo in How to Read Now. In their minds, queerness is not within the claimable realms of liberty because it is wrong, and just as we would not permit thieves to steal, we must prevent queer people from… being queer. They believe they will not be free until they are free of the Other.

 

Related reading:

This Land Is Not Your Land: The long thread of white grievance by Hamilton Nolan

You Must Protect Anyone Chased by the Fascists by Kelly Hayes

Our fathers by Kyle Raymond Fitzpatrick

JD Vance and the Pro-Slavery New Right by Meg Conley

 

See also:

False equivalencies

Resilience builds on trust, fascism on fear

Who decides what’s normal?

Tracy Durnell

13 Aug 2025 at 06:44

Internet People

 WordPress anniversary, and thoughts on blogging by Kris Howard (via)

(I told him that URLs are meant to be forever, and that losing websites “creates gaps in humanity’s collective knowledge and holes in the fabric of our shared culture”).

I’m not sure if this is a generational thing, or just different cultures and social norms. Rodd’s theory is that we are Internet People – those who grew up with the dawn of the modern Internet and have strong feelings about keeping information free and decentralised – and that not everyone working in tech is an Internet Person.

+

YouTube and the end of “internet culture” by Justin Pot

Once upon a time the term “internet culture” was used to distinguish it from the broader American and global culture. The idea was that the average internet user was different than the average person—that people who spend a lot of time online are different than the majority of the population, and, importantly, have certain characteristics in common (a certain sense of humor, say, or a penchant for retro video game references).

That’s not how it works today.

 

See also:

What is the impact of online writing?

Long live hypertext!

Tracy Durnell

11 Aug 2025 at 23:31



Refresh complete

ReloadX
Home
(114) All feeds

Last 24 hours
Download OPML
A Very Good Blog by Keenan
*
A Working Library
Alastair Johnston
Anna Havron
*
Annie
Annie Mueller
Apple Annie's Weblog
*
Articles – Dan Q
*
Baty.net posts
bgfay
Bix Dot Blog
Brandon's Journal
Chris Coyier
Chris Lovie-Tyler
Chris McLeod's blog
*
Colin Devroe
*
Colin Walker – Daily Feed
Content on Kwon.nyc
Crazy Stupid Tech
daverupert.com
Dino's Journal 📖
dispatches
*
dominikhofer dot me
*
Dragoncatcher the blog
Excursions
*
Flashing Palely in the Margins
Floating Flinders
For You
*
Frank Meeuwsen
frittiert.es
Hello! on Alan Ralph
*
Human Stuff from Lisa Olivera
inessential.com
*
jabel
Jake LaCaze
*
James Van Dyne
*
Jan-Lukas Else
*
Jim Nielsen's Blog
*
Jo's Blog
*
Kev Quirk
lili's musings
Live & Learn
Lucy Bellwood
Maggie Appleton
*
Manton Reece
*
Manu's Feed
Matt's Blog
maya.land
*
Meadow
Minutes to Midnight RSS feed
Nicky's Blog
*
Notes – Dan Q
On my Om
Own Your Web
Paul's Dev Notes
*
QC RSS
*
rebeccatoh.co
reverie v. reality
*
Rhoneisms
ribbonfarm
Robert Birming
*
Robert Birming
Robin Rendle
Robin Rendle
Sara Joy
*
Scripting News for email
Sentiers – Blog
Simon Collison | Articles & Stream
strandlines
Tangible Life
the dream machine
*
The Torment Nexus
*
thejaymo
theunderground.blog
Thoughtless Ramblings
tomcritchlow.com
*
Tracy Durnell
*
Winnie Lim
*
yours, tiramisu

About Reader


Reader is a public/private RSS & Atom feed reader.


The page is publicly available but all admin and post actions are gated behind login checks. Anyone is welcome to come and have a look at what feeds are listed — the posts visible will be everything within the last week and be unaffected by my read/unread status.


Reader currently updates every six hours.


Close

Search




x
Colin Walker Colin Walker colin@colinwalker.blog