Linking Notes
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A collection of permanent notes, no matter how well written, is still just a collection. What transforms it into a thinking tool is the network of links between notes. Linking is the central practice of the Zettelkasten method – and the most commonly skipped.
Why Links Matter More Than Categories
When you file a note in a folder called "psychology," you are saying where it came from. When you link it to a note about a product decision you made last year, you are saying what it is useful for.
The difference is not cosmetic. Categories help you find notes when you already know what you are looking for. Links help you discover connections you did not know existed – and that is where new thinking happens.
How to Link Notes
Every time you write or process a note, ask: what existing note does this connect to? Do not wait until you have a large library. Link from the first note onward.
Types of links worth making:
- Direct relevance: this note supports, extends, or contradicts another specific note;
- Shared concept: both notes use the same underlying idea in different contexts;
- Question and answer: this note answers a question raised in another;
- Contrast: this note offers a different perspective on the same topic.
The link itself can be simple – just the title of the connected note, with a brief sentence explaining why the connection matters.
Structure Notes
As your library grows, certain notes will accumulate many links. At that point, it becomes useful to create a structure note – a note that does not contain new ideas but maps the landscape of a topic: which notes exist, how they relate, and what gaps remain.
Structure notes are not indexes or tables of contents. They are more like a hand-drawn map: imperfect, opinionated, and useful precisely because they reflect how you understand a topic at this moment.
The Map of Content
A Map of Content (MOC) is a type of structure note that collects links to all notes on a given theme, with brief annotations. It is not hierarchical like a folder – it is associative, like a mind map written in prose.
MOCs are valuable because they give you an entry point into a dense cluster of notes without requiring a rigid folder structure. You can have multiple MOCs for the same topic, each emphasizing different connections.
What a Linked Note System Looks Like Over Time
In the early months, a Zettelkasten feels sparse. Links are few, connections are thin. This is normal.
After a year of consistent practice, patterns emerge. Certain notes become hubs – ideas that many other notes link to. These are often your most important ideas, the ones that your thinking naturally returns to. The network reveals what you actually care about, more honestly than any folder structure could.
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