You had a good thought in the shower. The kind that, while it was forming, felt like it was going to change something — a small but useful insight about a project, a thing you've been meaning to tell a friend, an idea for the weekend. You meant to write it down when you got out. You didn't. By the time you'd had coffee, the shape of it was gone and what remained was the flat outline of having had a thought.

This happens constantly. Most of the things that would be useful to remember show up at moments when you can't write them down — mid-walk, mid-conversation, mid-shower, mid-traffic. The cost isn't dramatic; you just lose the ability to act on small useful thoughts and gradually accept that this is what your life is.

The fix isn't more discipline. It's a capture habit so low-friction that it actually survives the moment, and a vault that lets you find the captures again when you need them.

## A capture habit has two parts: getting it down and finding it later

Most "capture systems" only solve the first half. You can write a thought into any notes app on your phone in fifteen seconds. The reason it doesn't help is that two months later, you don't remember whether the thought is in there, what app you put it in, what you'd search for, or whether you ever actually wrote it down.

A capture habit only works if both halves work. The capture has to be fast enough to survive the moment. The retrieval has to be easy enough that you actually use it.

A markdown vault like Docapybara is one shape that fits this — your captures land as plain text, the agent reads across all of them, and you can search by what you remember about the thought ("the idea about the weekend trip with my brother") instead of by what you typed. (For the broader version of "all your offhand captures become a long-running record," see [Turn Casual Captures Into a Searchable Life Archive](/guides/personal-life/casual-captures-searchable-life-archive/).)

## Voice as the default capture method

For everything that happens away from a keyboard — and that's most of life — voice is the right capture tool. Not because typing is bad, but because the friction of stopping, opening an app, finding the right page, and typing is enough to lose the thought.

Tap record, talk for ten or twenty seconds. *"Idea while walking. The reason the marketing brief feels off is that we're answering the wrong question — they want to know how to choose, not what to choose. Reframe around comparison."* Done. The transcription lands on the page, the agent can sort it later.

The transcripts include speaker labels for multi-voice recordings, so a conversation captured in real time keeps track of who said what. Useful for capturing a friend's recommendation, a stranger's good observation overheard in a coffee shop, a back-and-forth with a partner that crystallized something.

For longer captures — a fifteen-minute thought stream where you're working something out — voice still works. Talk it out, get the transcript, edit later if you want or just leave it.

## A single inbox page is enough

You don't need an organizing system at the moment of capture. You need a place to put the thing where you'll find it again.

A single *Inbox* page, sitting at the top of your vault, handles this. Every quick capture lands here. Voice notes, half-finished thoughts, articles you wanted to read, names of restaurants someone mentioned, the shape of an idea you don't have time to work out yet.

The agent does the sorting on demand. *"Look at everything in the inbox from this week and tell me what categories the captures fall into."* You get a quick scan of what you've been thinking about. *"Move the cooking-related captures to the cooking page and the work-related ones to the work page."* The agent files them.

For most people, weekly is the right cadence to triage. Once a week, scan the inbox, file the captures that have a clear home, archive the ones that don't matter anymore, and let the rest sit. Some captures are still raw — they're not ready to be filed because you haven't figured out what they're about yet. Leave them. (For people whose brain especially hates the up-front-sort step, [Note-Taking with ADHD](/guides/adhd-neurodivergent/best-note-taking-adhd/) walks the same shape.)

## Capture without judging the content

The thing that kills capture habits is filtering at the moment of writing. You start to think *"is this worth capturing? Is this insightful enough?"* and the answer is no, because in the moment, almost nothing feels insightful enough. So nothing gets captured.

The rule that works: if it crossed your mind in a way that felt worth holding, capture it. Don't decide in the moment whether it's good. Decide later, when you're triaging the inbox and you can see the thought next to other thoughts and weigh it.

Most captures will turn out to be small. A reminder to text someone back. A book recommendation. A thing you noticed about a place. Some captures will turn out to be the seed of something bigger — but you can only see which is which in retrospect.

For the ones that do compound, the page they live on becomes a kind of working space. The marketing-brief reframe captured in the shower might join a *Marketing thinking* page where it accumulates with other observations about how clients describe what they want. Six months later, when you're writing a real piece on how to position a product, the page is already half-written by your past self.

## Finding the thing again — what changes with an agent

Traditional notes apps make you remember where you put a thing. You search by keyword, you click through folders, you scroll through the day you think you wrote it. If you don't remember the right keyword, you don't find the note.

The agent reads across the whole vault. You can describe what you're looking for in normal terms: *"Find the idea I had about reframing the marketing brief — I think it was a few weeks ago, captured by voice."* It searches the transcripts, finds the match, and pulls the relevant passage with a citation back to the page.

Some other questions the agent can answer that don't require you to remember where:

- *"What have I been thinking about most often in the last month?"* — surfaces recurring topics across the inbox.
- *"Find the restaurant recommendations I've captured in the last six months — give me the list, with who recommended each one if I noted it."*
- *"What was the name of that book my brother mentioned over Christmas?"* — searches the transcripts from the relevant period.
- *"Pull every capture related to the kitchen renovation, in chronological order."*

The retrieval is the half that makes the capture worth doing. Without it, you've just dumped thoughts into a folder. With it, the captures become a working memory that's actually accessible.

## Capture moments that pay off well

A few specific situations where capture pays off in ways that feel disproportionate:

**Right after a meeting.** Two minutes of voice in the parking lot — what was actually decided, what was left open, what you want to follow up on, who was in the room and how it felt. Worth more than the agenda or the official notes, because it's your honest read. ([How to Capture Action Items So They Actually Get Done](/guides/meetings-people/action-items-actually-get-done/) takes this further on the meeting side.)

**Right after a conversation with someone you don't see often.** What you talked about, what they're up to, anything they mentioned that you want to remember. Search for their name later when you're prepping to see them again and you'll have actual context.

**Right after reading something good.** Three sentences while it's fresh on what stuck. The article, the book chapter, the podcast episode — capture the thing you'd tell someone about. Six months later when you're trying to remember why a piece mattered, the capture is your access point.

**The middle of a long task.** When you notice something — a flaw in your approach, a better way to do this, a thing you keep getting wrong — capture it without breaking flow. Triage later.

**Right before you fall asleep.** A surprising number of useful thoughts arrive in the ten minutes between deciding to sleep and actually sleeping. Voice from the dark, ten seconds, transcribed. You'll be glad in the morning.

## A weekly review that doesn't take long

Once a week, twenty minutes is enough to keep the system honest. Open the inbox. Scan. Three buckets:

- **File** — captures that have a clear home (an existing page, a project, a person). Move them or ask the agent to.
- **Act** — captures that need a small action (text someone back, look something up, add to a list). Do them now or convert them to a task.
- **Let sit** — captures that aren't ready to be sorted because you haven't figured out what they're about yet. Leave them in the inbox; come back next week.

For the *let sit* pile, the agent can help: *"Look at the captures that have been in the inbox for more than two weeks. Are any of them connected to each other?"* Sometimes you'll see a pattern — three captures over a month all circling the same loose idea — and that's when you create a new page for it.

The weekly review isn't a chore if you keep it short. The point isn't to organize everything. It's to keep the inbox from becoming a graveyard, and to notice the patterns in what you've been thinking about.

## A starter shape that works on day one

If you're starting today, the whole setup is small:

- **Inbox** — one page, sits at the top.
- A few obvious destination pages — one per ongoing project, one per person you talk about often, one per recurring topic.
- A weekly review reminder, twenty minutes, on a day that's reliably quiet.

That's it. No taxonomy to maintain, no system to learn, no plugin to install.

The capture habit isn't about remembering everything. It's about not losing the small useful thoughts that would, if you held onto them, gradually shape the way you work and think. The cost is twenty seconds of voice now and twenty minutes a week to triage. The payoff is a working memory you can actually rely on.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/). Set up the inbox tonight, capture the next thought you have, and see how much different the next week feels.