Monday, January 26, 2009

Tools of the trade

Wow, it's been just a little over a day since I last posted. Haven't had a blog post this close to another in... a long time. So anyways, this started out as a comment on Lifehacker, and it became a lot longer than a comment should be. And being a boring person obsessed with pens and notebooks, I couldn't delete it, so here it is.

I love writing. Pen on paper. While I can get the same words down while typing, faster and actually legible to a normal human, it doesn't have the same life. Written words have personality. If your thoughts wander, they go with you without too much thought... if my mind wanders while at the computer, I have to stop typing. When writing, I'll think, and it will somehow end up on paper. Not always truly resembling words (I tend to make m's with three humps, and W's become triple-u's) but I can correct that easily enough. I make plenty of mistakes I have to cross out, but it adds to the character of the page, and my notebook looks well-loved and well-used by he time I'm done. Two rules for all writing: 1) printing = doom. I only write in cursive unless absolutely necessary. 2) I must have lined notebooks, but wide-ruled kills me. I have rather horrid writing skills (People claim my handwriting is beautiful, but illegible - like 18th century letters) so I need a lined notebook. This is in all cases. I cannot write smaller than the lines provided (psychological quirk), and writing large words makes my handwriting even worse, especially since I use very narrow pens.

For journals, diaries, and random musings, NOTHING works as beautifully as a Moleskine large lined notebook and a black Pilot G-2. I love the width (height?) of the Moleskine lines. It's the perfect stze for my handwriting. I don't know the technical size, but it is smaller than college-ruled. Perfect. The sheets are the perfect thickness, and a soft ivory off-white. I feel as though I were writing something profound on that paper, even though it's usually something to the effect of "It's snowing again." Then again, George Orwell, a man I consider to be one of the greatest writers of all time, had journal entries consisting of, and I quote, "12/1/39. Three eggs." And I'll bet he used a Moleskine. There's hope for me yet! In any case, it will be amusing ten years from now to find out what I considered important

For notes from school and stuff I'll actually have to remember later, I'll use a spiral-bound, college-ruled notebook + four .5mm Pilot G-2s, one each black, red, green, and blue. I color-code based on importance of point (if I'm in a hurry or I have to write quickly, I write in black and put a colored star next to important points). If I hate the class, I burn the notebook at the end of the semester. It's a highly symbolic and satisfying endeavor, and the most when it came to my history class. I have never lit a match with more glee than the day after my history final. Oh, I love history, just not the way some people teach it.

For writing (short stories and the like), a spiral-bound, college-ruled notebook and my beloved G-2s. A different system, though. Write in black, first round of edits in other colors. Red = DIE SENTENCE/WORD, DIE!!! HOW ON EARTH I LET THIS FILTH NEAR MY BEAUTIFUL STORY IS BEYOND COMPREHENSION! Green = Hmm, better fix this. The premise is good, but it needs a new word or phrase, or perhaps a little exposition. Blue = KEEP THIS AT ALL COSTS, EVEN IF IT MEANS SELLING THE GRAND PIANO, THAT I DO NOT ACTUALLY HAVE, IN ORDER TO AFFORD FOOD BECAUSE THIS MUST STAY FOR IT IS PERFECT. Once I have made note of the edits to be done, I then copy over to the computer. The reason it's a normal notebook is because I tend to write out of order, and I have to tear it out and put it in the right order when I'm done. Also, I change so much while writing, that it would be sacrilege to cross out so much on a Moleskine (They're expensive, too; can't forget that).

For Bible study, I use the multiple-pen, color-coded routine on a spiral-bound, college-ruled notebook. Multiple colors to make certain points stand out, and a notebook for the same reason as writing... my thoughts go everywhere and I try to organize later. If I'm doing a study on Romans and decide to do a Bible study on fasting the next day, I can do so, and then the day after that go back to Romans - later, I'll rip 'em all out and put them in a 3-ring binder, with Romans together and Fasting later. For sermon notes, I do that on the computer, since I can type faster than write, and I have the Bible on here too, which makes it much easier to search for a verse. I do tend to copy those notes down later, if only for redundancy and to refresh it in my mind, and to add any more thoughts I might have.

There you have it. Random, pointless, and useless ramblings. Blogging is fun that way. You can write stuff that no one usually would see, and probably still won't, but you can feel important because someone might, someday, read it. Congratulations, whoever you are! You just boosted my ego! Not that I know it. I think I need some sleep. I'm rambling again.

1 comment:

Trist said...

Hah... ver' interesting, I must say! Mainly because I'm just the opposite. I CANNOT think on paper. I have to concentrate too hard on writing. Typing, on the other hand, is so easy that I hardly have to think about it at all, and my mind can go wherever it wants and my fingers keep up. (Also, cursive, to me, equates to DOOM, unnecessary capitals and all. It's either print, or a very stilted, illeligible, cramped hand.)

"Then again, George Orwell, a man I cosdier to be one of the greatest writers of all time, had journal entries consisting of, and I quote, "12/1/39. Three eggs.""

AHAH so amazing.

...Reminds me, I need to put up Ye Diaree Offe Windle Poons Junior, sometime soon... *wanders off to schooling*