Burn After — Reading

Think of the last time you wrote something you were absolutely certain about. A political rant. A breakup letter you never sent. A brilliant startup idea. Now look at it six months later. Is it still brilliant? Or is it just… evidence ?

And then burn it before it turns into a cage.

Burn After Reading: The Case for Disposable Ideas and Temporary Truths Burn After Reading

So write it down. Be furious. Be ambitious. Be a fool.

We mistake documentation for wisdom. We think that if we write it down, we must protect it, defend it, and build a shrine around it. But most of our ideas aren’t monuments. They are . Think of the last time you wrote something

Scaffolding is ugly. It’s temporary. It exists solely to help you build something real—and then it needs to be torn down. If you leave the scaffolding up, you can’t see the finished building. You just see the mess you made along the way.

The moment you show someone, the idea becomes a performance. You start defending it. You start caring if they think it’s smart or crazy. The fire only works if the reading is private. Some truths are only for you. And some truths are only for the moment. A brilliant startup idea

I’m talking about .

We backup our phones to the cloud. We archive our emails. We screenshot conversations “just in case.” Every half-formed thought, grocery list, and passive-aggressive tweet is preserved for eternity on a server somewhere.