Tajdid Rahman

How I read for ideas, not just for pages

Connecting highlights, notes, and design work

Oct 21, 2025

Abstract colorful shapes and lines in watercolor

On my desk, there’s always a small stack of books—some half-read, some just cracked open, and a couple with pages dog-eared beyond saving. I’m the kind of reader who jumps between titles, chasing ideas rather than obsessing over finishing every last chapter.

A couple of years ago, I got a Kindle, and it completely changed how I read. I started using the highlights feature religiously, and every time I came across a sentence or idea worth keeping, I’d tap and save it. But the real game-changer was connecting my Kindle to Readwise. Now, all my highlights sync automatically, and they don’t just disappear into the digital void—they resurface in my daily Readwise review, like little postcards from my past self.

And sometimes, those resurfaced highlights land at exactly the right moment. One morning, a Readwise email brought back a line from Show Your Work! by Austin Kleon: “You can’t find your voice if you don’t use it.” That day, I was hesitating over whether to share a new UI exploration on social media—worried it wasn’t polished enough. That one line pushed me to post—and it led to conversations and opportunities I wouldn’t have had otherwise.

I read a lot about creativity, product, business, productivity, and self-development. But I don’t see reading as a race to the final page. For me, it’s about finding the insights that stick—the ones that actually shift how I think or work—and giving them the time they deserve.

Maximise time investment

I’m not here to devour every word. Instead, I want to cover more ground, sample more perspectives, and then go deep only where it counts. That way, I’m not just “well-read” but well-fed with the ideas that matter most.

Start with a summary

Before I sink hours into a book, I’ll skim a high-quality summary—Shortform and Blinkist are my go-tos. They’re quick filters to see if the ideas are worth a deeper dive. If they are, I commit. If not, I’ve still taken something valuable without the time sink.

Spend time with the right ideas

When a book passes the test, I slow everything down. I’ll spend an hour or two with its core concepts—taking notes, mapping them to my own challenges, and thinking about how to put them into practice.

Keeping ideas alive in Obsidian

But reading and highlighting are only part of the process—what matters is making sure those ideas don’t fade away. That’s where Obsidian comes in.

Readwise is my collection hub. It pulls in highlights from everywhere: books, articles, newsletters, Twitter threads, YouTube transcripts, and my Kindle. Instead of leaving them scattered across different platforms, Readwise automatically exports them into my Obsidian vault.

Every new highlight lands tagged with “Readwise inbox”, ready for me to process. From there, I connect them to related notes, link them into ongoing projects, and weave them into my own thinking.

The best part? They’re searchable and ready when I need them. Just last month, while designing a property investment dashboard, I pulled up a saved UX principle from a book I’d read over a year ago—it instantly solved a layout problem I’d been stuck on.

Reading this way means the right ideas are always within reach—ready to shape my next design, solve tricky problems, and spark the kind of work worth sharing.

Tajdid Rahman

Tajdid Rahman is a product designer based in Dubai. He designs, codes, and writes about design, code and whatever he's obsessed with at the moment.