In
On Being a Writer: 12 Simple Habits for a Writing
Life That Lasts,
Ann Kroeker (co-author with Charity Craig) gives some advice courtesy of
another writer, Dorothea Braude, in how to engage memory: set aside a short
period each day: when you will, by taking thought, recapture a childlike ‘innocence
of eye,’” the state of wide-eyed interest you have when you were five years
old.
Ann,
like the rest of us on the planet, has to do more than simply sitting and
thinking to recapture that “innocence of eye.” She has to write her thoughts
and observations down, using whatever is closest at hand – a journal, a Word
document, phone of tablet apps, or whatever else is handy (I’ve been known to
write thoughts on grocery lists).
I
carry a journal with me just about everywhere I go, including business
meetings, church worship services, and the gym. In the one I’m carrying now
(its predecessors safely stored on a bookshelf above my computer), you might
find rough drafts of poems, quotes (like the one by Dorothea Braude cited
above), my notes from a
poetry reading with Billy Collins, sermon notes, and odd facts like “During
August 1914, the Times of London
received more than 100 poetry submissions about the war every day.”
When
my wife and I went to Amsterdam and Paris for a belated 25th wedding
anniversary trip, I carried a travel journal with me, dutifully recording each
day where we went, what we saw, where we ate, and what we bought. It was not
only helpful for correcting faulty memories later, it was also useful for
helping to keep track of expenses and anything that might have to be declared
for Customs.
I
did the same thing these past three years for our trips to England. Except
these travel journals are slightly different. In addition to places visited and
places we ate, they also include drafts of poems written while on a train to
Oxford, notations from ads on the tube in London, a few comments about
Salisbury Cathedral, observations from a walk in St. James Park, and any number
of things I noticed and didn’t want to forget.
I
can’t say I actually recaptured that “innocence of eye” from when I was five
years old, but using the journal as an extension of my noticing things has
contributed immeasurably to my writing.
1 comment:
Good advice, Glynn, thanks. I'll highlight this on the Christian Poets & Writers blog - http://christianpoetsandwriters.blogspot.com.
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