hatguy1
One Too Many
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- Da Pairee of da prairee
A journalist friend of mine gave me that same advice re blogging even when I wasn't sure what to blog about.
AF you are as good as the humor writers in many outdoor mags I read. JMHO LOL
I have also found that having a nice, permanent journal has helped. I used to lose the paper I wrote on but I went and bought a nice bound leather journal that helps keep everything together.
Not everyday has to be exciting. The last few nights I have just commented on my feelings about the Christmas season and such
I've been at this - off and on - for almost 5 days now and I've used up probably 6 cartridges of ink for my fountain pen and probably more than 20 pages of my small (over pocket sized) journal and I'm still finishing out the 100 things in the categories. Whew!
I have been a journal writer or possibly more of a chronicle writer on and off most of my life. While certainly not blessed in my skill with numbers, words came naturally, and when combined with a love of things past and a sense that no one was writing down the present I starrted off with enthusiam. That was battered around somewhat by instructors attempting to force us to "journal" for our own good (they somehow could not comprehend that for all the writing I did, having to waste time responding to their must fill in a response questions, were wasting time I would rather be doing my own writing or even more often reading something of interest or importance), but all in alll I have kept it up more than I have missed. Just recovering from one of those missed periods and this post was a good reinforcement of why I am back at it.
Looking back I am satisfied that my efforts are of value to me, as while memories still are clear, I know many who have lost those key events, and I hope that someday this and specific accounts and assignments from school, and notes of other training and teaching I have done may give someone a look at the world as I knew it.
As a historian I would like to encourage all of us to journal, and I must encourage those who do to keep classic written documents as the survivability currently is more permanent, despite advances in electronic document storage. We all live unique lives, and the best way for the future to know how we lived is for us to keep accounts. We are all history in the making.