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Welcome to Thinking It Through — where structure offers clarity, and clarity creates space for possibility.

This is the place to begin exploring. Whether you’re here for thoughtful essays, practical tools, or layered systems thinking, this page will help you find your way.

What This Space Is

This isn’t a niche blog; it was never meant to be. It began as a place to set down the half-formed, insistent ideas that wouldn’t leave me alone, the ones I needed to write just to understand what I really thought. Over time, that practice grew into a process: noticing connections, shaping patterns, and building structure around the questions that kept showing up.

 

I’ve learned that ideas rarely arrive fully formed. They need space, but they also need something to lean on. Structure doesn’t confine them; it supports them. When we build a framework around what we’re noticing, we give ourselves a way to hold onto it, return to it, and eventually turn it into something more substantial.

This site is not about narrowing down to one lane. Gardening, genealogy, planning, technology, and money do not exist independently in my world. The real throughline is the thinking beneath them. Patterns repeat across disciplines. Planning a trip echoes the way a garden bed is designed. A spreadsheet can untangle a family story or clarify a financial decision.

 

So while the topics vary, the focus is consistent: structure creates clarity, and clarity creates space for possibility. This is a workspace for layered ideas and evolving systems, a place to think things through not only to understand them, but also to build on them.

Who I Am

I am Kathi Lafser, and I build frameworks for thinking things through.

 

I have always believed that structure is not about control. It is a form of care, a way to make space for possibility, to create clarity where there was once chaos, and to support the growth of ideas that might otherwise stay half-formed. My instinct, whenever I face something new, is to pause and ask, “Can I just build a spreadsheet first?” I do not ask because I want to reduce everything to rows and columns. I ask because organizing what is in front of me helps me understand it.

 

Here, you will find that same instinct applied to many corners of life. I write about gardens and genealogy, about planning and systems, about technology and tools and how they influence the way we think. I explore how structure can help us shift our perspectives about money, or design a framework that supports the life we want to build. The topics vary, but the thread is constant. Structure helps us notice what matters, and it turns scattered ideas into something we can return to and build on.

 

I have spent my career working inside technology and software, learning to read the language of tools and translate what they can do into something that makes sense in the real world. The same is true here. This space is built around thoughtful systems and the way they support the way we live and work. It reflects the way I think and the way I move through the world: layered, intentional, and always evolving.

How to Explore

Arcs: The Deeper Throughlines

Arcs are the big thematic currents that run beneath everything here. They’re not labels you’ll click on in a menu, but they shape the way ideas unfold and how they connect to one another. They’re the scaffolding that holds the whole structure together.

 

  • Origins of Structure – exploring the backstory of systems, habits, and planning tendencies.

  • The Thinking Framework – making the invisible visible: how decisions, learning, and insight unfold.

  • Applied Intelligence – where concepts become tools, systems, and decisions.

  • Cultivated Systems – designing thoughtful approaches to complex, layered work and life.

  • Structure as Care – how frameworks become a form of generosity, possibility, and shared clarity.

  • Scaling Without Spiraling – sustainable growth and capacity-aware choices that keep complexity in check.

These arcs weave through everything I write. A single post might live inside more than one, and that’s the point. The structure is meant to hold layered ideas, not keep them separated.

Categories: The Entry Points

Categories are the visible signposts. They make it easy to find what you’re most interested in, even if you’re visiting for the first time. They’re the practical doorway into the deeper work.

 

  • Plain Story: Why I think the way I do

  • Plain Life: How I live and what I’ve learned

  • Plain Business: Building with clarity and earning with integrity

  • Plain Pursuits: What I love, learn, and lose time in

  • Plain Tech: Making technology understandable and useful

  • Plain Tools: Systems that support how I think

Every post lives inside one or more of these categories, but they’re always rooted in the arcs above. Categories guide you to the surface-level topic; arcs reveal the deeper context underneath it.

 
 

Bridges: How Ideas Move

While arcs shape the deeper structure and categories help you find your way, bridges describe how ideas move between them. They’re the connective tissue — the recurring patterns of movement that show up across everything I write.

 

  • Thinking It Through – reflective processing and layered explanation

  • Structure as Care – systems as respect for time, energy, and attention

  • Applied Practice – turning ideas into action

  • Cultivated Systems – connecting abstraction and reality through design

  • Scaling Without Spiraling – growing without losing balance

  • Origins & Echoes – how the past informs the present, and instinct becomes practice

Bridges are why posts that look unrelated at first — a story about a garden, a reflection on technology, a spreadsheet for planning — start to feel connected once you spend time here. They trace how curiosity travels, how structure supports it, and how ideas evolve over time.

Start With These

If you’re new here, the best way to get a feel for what this space is about is to read a few pieces that capture its heart. Each one approaches curiosity and structure from a different angle, and together they show the range of what lives here — from story and reflection to practice and application.

 

Here are a few good places to begin:

Whiteboard filled with scribbles and a lightbulb sketch held up with the text “The Whiteboard Squirrel Manifesto” overlaid
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An artist painting outdoors among soft flowering trees in early spring — an impressionist scene in nature.
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Silhouette of a head with swirling arrows radiating outward, symbolizing nonlinear thinking and mind map brainstorming.
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A pigeon peering through a rusted circular metal frame — symbolizing the pigeonhole paradox of being confined by others’ perceptions.
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A group of travelers sitting arm in arm at the edge of the water, symbolizing connection and group travel planning.
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You don’t need to read everything here, and you certainly don’t need to read it in order. Start with whatever pulls at your curiosity. Wander. Skim. Follow the threads that interest you. That’s what this space is built for , giving curiosity a structure to grow on.

 

And when you’re ready to dive deeper, there’s always more waiting for you.