Ask HN: Should I maintain a daily journal of my thoughts?
I am 21 yrs old, my philosophical thoughts seem to have changed rapidly in the past year.
@pg once mentioned that he first met @tlb when he was discussing with @rtm on the above question. pg, care to share your thoughts.
Please share your workflow, say eg: How do you use org-mode to accomplish the above
Philosophers of HN & Older users of HN: (ok, sorry; old but still sexy users of HN :)
Do you regret not logging your life in your 20s?
Ignore this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-rEb0KuopI
12 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 13.1 ms ] threadYou might find it is not worth your time after a week (or two, or one month, or one year). When this happens, you quit. Before this happens, you will find out by yourself if you are getting anything positive from this.
It could improve your writing, or just give you a record to go back later to re-evaluate or enrich your original ideas. It could just be fun.
It only needs a bit of dedication and time. No money, and considerably less time than other activities (like learning to play an instrument or studying a foreign language)... given that the investment is so small, why don't you simply try and then decide by yourself?
I suspect that if you do something like that you soon develop a filter mechanism so that you really write only things that deserve a little effort, and the rest remains "in your head", so to speak.
Eventually I moved to a new country where I got a job related to what I'd been doing and blogging about. With a full time job there was less time or energy to blog daily, so I slipped. Now I blog maybe once or twice a month and do not see as obvious a benefit as I did when I blogged daily, because by the time I go to write a post I have forgotten a lot of what I've done and now it's out of my mind. Not only do I not remember everything I might want to blog about anymore, but this indicates that those ideas are _not_ as solid in my mind as they would have been if I had just written them down originally.
I think blogging daily is a great idea. When I started doing it I wondered if people would just find it useless and boring, until I realized that I wasn't doing it for other people. The blog was public, but the purpose was solely for my own benefit. In the end it helped others anyway, as a side effect.
Give it a try, would love to hear your thoughts.
https://devarist.com
Good luck.
On a serious note, I regret not writing things down consistently. Not every single thing I think about, but more substantial matters. I am trying to get into the habit of doing it now. Here are my 3 reasons to write:
1) Clarify and solidify your thinking 2) Learn how to express your thoughts in writing (very important no matter what you do in life) 3) Help "remember" things. This is especially useful if you need to build upon previous knowledge/discoveries. You won't need to start from scratch.
There are reason for keeping your notes private, but also good reasons for publishing them. Probably the biggest is getting feedback. Hearing other points of view is helpful in identifying missing pieces.