Coded Thinking is a short reflective booklet that addresses a simple but profound idea:
Some ideas are not suitable for immediate writing, and postponing writing them down may be a form of wisdom rather than hesitation.
The booklet does not teach the reader how to think.
It does not provide production steps or tools.
Rather, it gives him inner peace that his way of thinking is normal and legitimate.
The booklet covers:
- Why are we sometimes afraid of writing despite having so many ideas?
- The difference between forgetting an idea and protecting it
- The concept of “coded thinking” as a safe space for an idea before it matures
- Different forms of mental codes (word, color, symbol, silence)
- When should an idea be put on paper, and when should it remain inside you?
The language is calm, direct, and non-theoretical.
The text relies more on feeling than explanation.
The booklet should be a companion to the reader, not a guide for him.
This booklet is intended for:
- He thinks deeply before he writes.
- He feels that sometimes paper kills the idea.
- He keeps addresses that no one else understands.
- He needs inner permission to trust his own mind.