Documenting Everything:
Your Journal is Your Logbook
Sailors had it for years. Great explorers had it as well. If you
go on an expedition to an ancient Aztec mound, more than likely the archaeologist will
have one tooso, why shouldnt you own one? No, Im not speaking of the
scurvy that plagued the sailors! No, Im not speaking of the Loch Ness Monster or
Bigfoot, whom explorers claimed to have seen in snowy Manitoba winters. Nor am I speaking
of a lost city, which was never truly lost, but simply buried under mounds of earth and
recently dug up by an archaeologist.
Im speaking of journals. Journals? Yes! Keeping a journal
can be just as much an adventure as sailing the high seas, exploring unknown Canadian
wilderness, or digging in the dirt to find buried treasure.
Journals have been a source of reflection for centuries. My
suggestion is to look at your writing career as if youre an explorer analyzing
new-found land; an archaeologist digging up new artifacts and renaming them, and so on. .
How can you do this? Well, view your journal as a logbook and
document your daily happenings. Here is a suggested format for keeping your captains
log.
Divide your journal entries
into sections: Date, Weather, Mood, Events,
and Freewrite
1. Date: This is the obvious one (for some people). Write
the month, day and the year. Also write which day of the week it is (i.e., December 17,
2001; Monday).
2. Weather: Make
note of the temperature outside. Is it 100 degrees outside? Or, perhaps its only 20
degrees? Is it raining and 35 degrees?
Snowing and 110 degrees? Raining cats and
dogs? (Dont step in a poodle....)
3. Mood: Whats
going on in your head? Did you just get off the phone with your ex-lover who ruined your
day and sank you into the depths of depression? Write about it. Did you manage to pull off some wondrous
passive-aggressive revenge against said ex-lover? Write about that too, and how it made
you feel.
4. Events: Heres
when things get a bit complicatedfor some. You have to do your homework. Watch
television, read the newspaper and write a few lines about whats going on in your
city, state, country, or the world in general.
5. Freewrite: Heres your chance to shine. Since
were all writers, we should leave a section for free writing. Allow yourself some
space to simply write aimlessly, without direction. But, heres the
challengetry to limit yourself to a certain number of lines.
When you keep these entries for a week, two weeks, or a longer
period of time, it can be extremely beneficial. Comparing and contrasting the Mondays or
Tuesdays could be a surprising, learning experience.
Many times Ive written stories and wanted to
know what 78 degrees felt like, so I went to my journal and found an entry,
read my mood descriptions and weather descriptions and was easily informed from my own
documentation.
Keep in mind, a good writer documents everythingwhether it
be on paper or just in the minds filing cabinet. But, too keep things in order, try
to keep your documentation on paper-- or at least saved to disk.
Copyright © 2002. www.OutStretch.net.
To contact him e-mail Editor@OutStretch.net
|