Tuesday, March 5, 2024

How To Grieve a Stolen Diary

From cherwell.org

By Leila Moore

Elizabeth Bishop’s poem ‘One Art’ is beautiful because of its hypocrisy. The speaker exalts loss – of places, names, houses, their mother’s watch – with an odd joviality. You’re sure, reading it for the first time, that there must be something disingenuous going on here. The act of writing exposes the chasm between speech and feeling, as Bishop squeezes out the painful final lines:

–Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture 

I love) I shan’t have lied. It’s evident

the art of losing’s not too hard to master

though it may look like (Write it!) like disaster.

Bishop’s voice here, before she lets the mask slip, seems to be reminiscent of some stoic and ancient philosophy, those that recognises the futility of attaching our worth and feelings to things you can have, whether it is a beautiful ring, or a city, or a person. She remains resistant to the hyper-consumption of modernity, when every time we open our phones, we are bombarded with an array of products that promise to make us feel a little better about ourselves if we buy them. But all of that is old news- we’ve all learned by now that ordering something off Amazon can’t replace those parts of ourselves we suspect have gone missing. 

Besides, isn’t it boring, not to covet anything? A friend texted me recently with the quote that ‘in capitalist societies, to love things is something of an embarrassment’, and I felt gratified that I did have material things in my life to treasure: my books, my favourite clothes, and my diaries. Treasuring physical objects, especially ones that you have dreamed of and laboured over, feels like an apt rebellion in the age of click and collect.

Of course, there is a more pertinent theme to ‘One Art’ than possession, and that is loss. The motion of it, its substance, its stubborn revival throughout our lives. Until recently, I was fairly sure that the loss of a possession could never truly devastate me- to do so seemed frivolous, spoiled, even a little unintelligent. I could lose my favourite pair of shoes, but I would still be me, I thought. That is, until I lost my diary.

Well, it wasn’t technically lost; it was stolen on the last night of term. I always find endings uncomfortably liminal, full of fluctuating emotions and swallowed goodbyes that live in your throat for weeks. That’s exactly why this Michaelmas I strategised something that would keep me occupied and not too existential: the faithful pub trip. Bundling into the Lamb and Flag on one of the first nights of December, I chatted with a friend about the last few days, and then briefly entertained some Americans who wanted restaurant recommendations from ‘two real Oxford girls’. It was a normal evening, and the infinite potential for disaster that ‘Friday of 8th week’ holds in my mind turned out to be, well, in my mind. That is, until I woke up the morning after and realised I had left my bag in the pub. After confirming nobody had turned anything in, I began to accept that the journal, stored inside, was truly lost.

The first stage of acceptance took place in Crewe train station, which is already one of the most depressing places in England, indeed only made more so by the sight of me wailing on the phone to my mother as I wandered aimlessly up and down a platform. The shock of receiving the message that, ‘No, no brown leather bag was handed in last night’, had sent me into a temporary frenzy, and I was sobbing unashamedly in public for the first time of my adult life. My mum has watched me grow into a person who cocoons herself with words. Closest to my heart is the dear-diary prose of the journal, the mode of writing I began with at age five, which I still swear by now. At twenty, the form of the diary is still sacred to me, the place where I express what I am and craft the person I hope to be. 

The notebook I lost spanned around six months of my life, including all my summer travels, even a few photos. But it wasn’t necessarily the memories I had recorded that hurt the most to lose- it was my feelings. My most private, most painful, and sometimes most shameful thoughts went into that notebook, the most previous entry dated only a few days prior to its loss. The thought tormented me, of a complete stranger rifling through the pages I had imprinted my heart onto. Would they be amused? Would they think I was silly, or reprehensible? My worst fear was that they would view it as entertainment, an opportunity to tour my mind as a burglar would stroll into an unlocked house. ‘I’m sure you feel as if you’ve been violated,’ my mum said over the phone when I had stopped crying. Her words twisted in my stomach, but I was grateful that at least she understood. 

When I arrived home for Christmas, I was drawn to the keepsake box stowed under my bed which contains all the diaries I have finished. My grief had subsided after a week, but I found myself thinking about writing more than I was actually writing. Why, I asked myself, had this habit endured for so much of my life, long enough to become instinct? Why did life not feel entirely real until I had written it down? Was it possible, I thought, that I had relied too much on these diaries to make my reality?

                                                                                                              Artwork by Yuan Yuan Foo

Diving headfirst into existentialism, I pulled out the first notebook from the box. A gift from my aunt when I was five, it came with a little lock and key that I quickly lost, but the notebook remains. It’s as battered as you would expect: some pages are ripped out, some just contain scribbles, or a  person without arms I had abandoned drawing when something more interesting came along. Progressing through earlier journals acquainted me with the mechanics of writing- how to avoid smudging ink, how to date, how to write in cursive. When I was six or seven, I began to chronologise, and increasingly to complain- about my annoying sister, or someone at school.

There’s little variety. I myself don’t find them that interesting, despite having actually written them. Nevertheless, I can appreciate them for what they represent; namely, the beginning of my discovery of a secret place I could reside. A place of my own creation, which both did and did not exist, which was everywhere but only for me to find- in short, privacy.

Childhood is not a time many would define by privacy. For a start, you are taken care of for most of it, watched by someone, whether it be a parent or teacher. Sharing a bedroom meant I hardly had any time alone until I was around ten- but a diary in childhood is one of the few places of solitude you can create for yourself. I was a quiet and at times strangely introspective kid, and I quickly learned that reading or writing meant people would leave me alone, and that being alone entailed a different kind of living than I had experienced before.

Also apparent from my writing is how expert the young diarist can become at mimicry; at age eight I strolled into a narrative voice heavily influenced by Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and I even accompanied my entries with drawings for a few weeks. Thankfully I gave that up quickly after realising whatever talents I possessed did not lie in visual art. At age ten, when I was writing in a red fabric-bound journal, I faithfully addressed it as ‘kitty’, hoping to emulate my new personal hero, Anne Frank. Beyond the diarists and diary-novels I was reading at the time, these entries are really an unconscious reflection of what I loved to read when I learned to love reading, from The Little Princess to The Hunger Games.

In May 2017, I picked up my journal to write an inventory of all my friends at school; what I liked and disliked about them, who was popular, who I admired and who I was jealous of. The teenage diarist is one of the most enduring images in pop culture; creative, disdainful and rebellious, the diary is an adolescent’s new playground. It’s clear I was revelling in the true range of my emotions when I was fourteen: one paragraph I’m dissecting the reasons for my parent’s divorce with surprising maturity, the next I’m describing the specific colour of my period blood. At this age I discovered how liberating it can be to simply write the unspeakable, something you would have never dared to articulate before that now exists just for you. 

At seventeen, Sylvia Plath’s collected diaries became my bible. I loved the passion she observed the world with, and tried to channel her diligent diarising into my own, fervently recording interactions I had with people in coffee shops and attempting to get down scraps of poetry. Now that I’m a few years older, and one stolen diary wiser, I can’t help but think of the trespass it is to treasure someone’s personal writings that were never intended for publication- that possibly would never have been in the public domain if their author had not committed suicide. But I fell in love with Plath’s writing about fish and chips before I was mature enough to consider the ethics of reading it-

‘The girl picked up the cracked metal tin of salt and snowed it into the bag. Then, taking the cut-glass bottle of vinegar, she showered it onto the fish, lifted the edge of it, and doused the potatoes. She handed the bag back to the woman, who wrapped it in a sheaf of newspaper.’

Today I still find it difficult, as a literature student, to know what I think about reading diaries as literary artefacts. The private self is indeed different from the self we construct to face the public; but it is still constructed nonetheless, and whether it is ‘truer’ I could not say. Apart from the fact that, if the stranger that stole my diary reads it instead of throwing it in the bin, I hope they would understand that although that notebook expresses important parts of myself, it hardly constitutes the whole of it. 

When I was eighteen I started university and stopped writing for myself. At the same time I was writing more than I ever had in my life, and became quickly acquainted with the rhythm of churning out the weekly essay. People often don’t have the energy to write anything but their tutorial essays at Oxford, and this was true for me, but the bigger obstacle to my keeping a diary was actually the new version of my life I was struggling to become acquainted with. As I departed from adolescence, so I departed from the ways I wrote about my adolescence, and after many failed attempts at describing my new life, I got tired of staring at blank pages and angry at myself for being unable to fill them with anything but self-pity. So I put my pen down for ten months and learned how to have fun. 

But old habits are hard to break, and in my second year I inadvertently started writing about my feelings again when I was keeping a travel itinerary in Morocco. My diaries now look very different to what they did before; they are not such obviously precious objects, with pages ripped out, scribbled over, paragraphs abruptly broken off when I had to dash out of the house, and entries interspersed with shopping lists which remind me to buy a new pair of nail scissors. I’ve also taken to obsessively collecting ticket stubs, notes from friends, play programmes, and postcards, in an attempt to scrapbook. It’s an activity that I find profoundly feminine and novel, with its roots in the 19th century scrapbooking of wealthy and travelled women. Trying it myself only sheds light on my own shortcomings, and the unrecognised talents of women living centuries ago, who were able to create such beautiful works of art in their day-to-day lives. 

Diarising is one of the most socially accepted forms of vanity, a room which contains only your voice. When I lost mine, it was the loss of this privacy, the preserved parts of myself – shopping lists and all – that hurt the most to be parted from. But as the weeks have passed, I’ve forgotten most of what I wrote in the stolen notebook, and I think less and less about the anonymous thief who may be delighting in it. Most surprisingly, I’m still me, with the same ideas and feelings which I can record in my new journal (I treated myself to my first Moleskine to help me through the morning period).

I always assumed that I journaled to obtain self-discovery; that one day I might stumble across the clearly articulated source of all my problems in an entry dated ten years prior. How naïve it was, I realise now, to think I could be my own archivist. Writing about my life could never solve the question of who I am; that kind of work must be done away from the page. What I have learned is that these notebooks are aesthetic testimonies to the various chapters of my life. The greatest joy of keeping them is being able to flick through the filled pages and basking in the texture of my own existence: ‘I am, I am, I am.’

When I lost my journal, I was confronted with how much of a hoarder I am, of my emotions as much as my possessions. What I failed to realise before is that all diary keeping is loss. What’s present in my entries is the shedding of pain and worries, hopes and aspirations, so that I can move through life a little less encumbered by their weight. It is an endless labour of love that involves parting with my feelings in the hope that they can find a more bearable form in language. It demands me to trust that I have the ability to make something useful out of this separation.

Diaries are collections of our most noteworthy debris, and we keep them because, as long as they have blank pages to offer, they, in turn, offer the opportunity to lose whatever is causing weight on the mind and heart: an exercise in self-annihilation as much as self-creation. It took a forgotten bag and a healthy dose of thievery for me to realise this, and to know that Elizabeth Bishop is right after all; loss is an art, and I have been unwittingly practising it since the Christmas I received my first notebook. Once I got past the sensation of feeling as though I had lost a limb, I welcomed my diary’s disappearance as an opportunity to let go: of the feelings of inadequacy and guilt it sometimes stored, of unkind words about the people I love, of unfulfilled wishes. 

Of course, I could have taken a different route of cynicism and anger, that I can never keep the things I treasure safe. But so much writing has taught me that I do have free will in small matters such as these, so I’ve chosen to be kind to myself, to craft a story and a lesson out of the whole affair. Isn’t it what I’ve been preparing for all along?

https://cherwell.org/2024/03/04/diary-materialism-existentialism-plath-memories/ 

Friday, February 23, 2024

It's like One Day, 365 days a year: how keeping a diary helped me chart the rollercoaster of my 20s

From standard.co.uk

By Katie Strick

July 15, 2019. The day after my first big breakup. According to the little dog-eared five-year diary I keep in the drawer next to my bed, I cycled into work in my biggest pair of sunglasses and my best friend met me on a bench with a packet of Sainsbury’s strawberry pencils because I couldn’t face the thought of going home to my flat.

The same day the following year looked pretty different, unsurprisingly. This frightening thing called coronavirus had arrived (yep, we still used the long version back then) and apparently I did two workouts in my parents’ garden because there was literally nothing else to do. I won’t bore you with the details of my 2021 and 2022 entries because they largely involve dates with men who turned out to be, well, early-days Dexters — a reference you’ll understand if you’ve been binging and blubbing over One Day, David Nicholls’ famed novel-turned-Netflix adaptation like me.

AMBIKA MOD AS EMMA AND LEO WOODALL AS DEXTER IN ONE DAY
LUDOVIC ROBERT/NETFLIX

Still, my July 15ths haven’t all been breakups and lockdown boredom. In fact, apparently it was the 2023 edition that saw me walk into a pub garden, unknowing that I was about to meet the three future housemates who would introduce me to some of the women I’d call my BFFs today. It’s funny, really, the benefit of hindsight and how much can change in a year or five.

I picked this particular date for obvious reasons, of course. It’s the same date you probably have etched into your mind, too, if like me you’ve spent the last week devouring Netflix’s new One Day miniseries starring Leo Woodall and Amika Mod. But the truth is I could’ve picked any day of the year. Thanks to my trusty bedside journal, I don’t just have the one One Day to look back on. I have 365 — a fact that comes with the fascinating albeit time-consuming advantage of meaning I can play this fun back of throwbacks every night. Say what you want about dwelling on the past, but for me it’s no wonder nostalgic Gen-Zers are jumping on the journalling train. I can categorically say my five-year-diary is the best £10 I’ve spent in, well, five years.

Journalling is an important reminder that the most significant days of our lives are often the unpredictable ones: when you wake up expecting another dreary Tuesday — then something extraordinary happens

Entertainment value is obviously high up on my pros list whenever I try to recruit a friend to my diary-writing club. Sending stories of Nights We’d Forgotten About (the one where George loses a tooth; the one where Aimee leaves her aubergine on the Central Line...) brings endless joy to my now 30-something set of friends, half of them bored at home breastfeeding or battling I’m-Quitting-My-Job! quarter life crises. Perspective, too, is another useful pro. Nothing puts your troubles into greater focus than knowing you felt similar levels of existentialism 12 months ago over a boy whose name you now need your diary to remember.

There are other note-worthy details you pick up on when diary-writing, too. The slow shifting of friendship dynamics. The gradual wisdom that comes with approaching 30. The themes that come up ever year, like being just-a-little-bit-ill for most of February and just-a-little-bit-rosé-eyed for most of June.

Charting it all has been a fascinating lesson in embracing the rollercoaster that is growing up — and a reminder of something Nicholls conveys so wonderfully on the page: that the most significant days of our lives aren’t always the birthdays or the weddings or the clichéd moments we think they’re going to be. It’s the unpredictable ones: the rainy Tuesdays, when you wake up expecting another dreary plod to the office and then something extraordinary happens that makes you go wow or guess-what or maybe even cry: that run-in with an old flame; that WhatsApp that changes everything; that night away with your oldest friends that descends into aching belly laughter.

It turns out most of us don’t need expensive therapy, half the time. We just need a pen and a couple of minutes each evening to reflect on that work dilemma we lost so many nights’ sleep over 12 months ago; how we needed it to get us to the next juncture we’re at now. Maybe I’ll think myself silly for writing this column in 12 months’ time. Maybe I’ll need a dash of its optimism. And that’s the beauty of it. It’s an empty page right now, one there’s no point trying to fill until it comes round because life is unpredictable, life is messy — and sure as hell is a lot of fun to read back on 365 days later.


https://www.standard.co.uk/comment/one-day-netflix-leo-woodall-dexter-my-diary-b1140338.html 

Monday, February 19, 2024

The Beauty and Chaos of a Short Monsoon Diary

From thedigitalweekly.com

By Siddharth Rao

Monsoons are a phenomenon that evoke a myriad of emotions in people around the world. From the refreshing smell of rain hitting dry earth to the chaos and destruction that can accompany heavy downpours, monsoons are a force of nature that cannot be ignored. In this article, we will explore the intricacies of a short monsoon diary, capturing the essence of this unique weather pattern.

                                                        Why does India have a monsoon type of climate?

The Science Behind Monsoons

Monsoons are characterised by a seasonal reversal of wind patterns, resulting in heavy rainfall in certain regions. The most well-known monsoon is the Indian monsoon, which brings relief to the parched lands of India every summer. The monsoon is driven by temperature differences between land and sea, with warm air rising over the Indian Ocean and cooler air rushing in to fill the void.

Impact on Agriculture

One of the most significant impacts of monsoons is on agriculture. The timely arrival of monsoon rains is crucial for farmers, as it determines the success of their crops. A delayed or erratic monsoon can lead to droughts and crop failures, affecting the livelihoods of millions of people.

  • Monsoons provide much-needed water for crops
  • Excessive rainfall can lead to flooding and waterlogging
  • Proper water management is essential during monsoon season

The Emotional Rollercoaster of Monsoons

Monsoons are not just about the physical impact they have on the environment; they also evoke a range of emotions in people. The sound of rain tapping on rooftops, the smell of wet earth, and the sight of lush greenery can bring a sense of peace and tranquillity. However, the fear of flooding, landslides, and other disasters can also create anxiety and stress.

Case Study: The Kerala Floods

In 2018, the Indian state of Kerala experienced devastating floods during the monsoon season. Heavy rainfall led to overflowing rivers, landslides, and widespread destruction. The floods claimed hundreds of lives and displaced thousands of people, highlighting the destructive power of monsoons.

Lessons Learned

The Kerala floods served as a wake-up call for better disaster preparedness and management. Authorities have since implemented measures to mitigate the impact of future floods, such as early warning systems, improved infrastructure, and community awareness programs.

Documenting a Short Monsoon Diary

Keeping a diary during the monsoon season can be a therapeutic way to process your emotions and experiences. Whether you jot down your thoughts, take photographs of the rain-soaked landscape, or create art inspired by the monsoon, a diary can help you capture the essence of this unique time of year.

Tips for Keeping a Monsoon Diary

  • Write about your daily experiences with the monsoon
  • Include sketches or photographs to visually document the season
  • Reflect on how the monsoon impacts your mood and emotions

Conclusion

The monsoon season is a time of contrasts – beauty and chaos, tranquillity and destruction. By documenting your experiences in a short monsoon diary, you can gain a deeper appreciation for the power of nature and the resilience of the human spirit. Embrace the monsoon season with open arms, and let its unpredictable nature inspire you to live in the moment.

https://thedigitalweekly.com/a-short-monsoon-diary/

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

Sheila Heti’s Astonishing Reinvention of the Diary

From anothermag.com

As the Alphabetical Diaries is published, Sheila Heti discusses keeping a diary, her dislike of the term ‘autofiction’, and fragmenting time and place in her writing to extraordinary effect

Work, love and money: Sheila Heti believes these are the things that preoccupy us most as human beings. In the Canadian author’s new book, the Alphabetical Diaries, these make up the three main pillars of the narrative. There’s the act of writing, which, in Heti’s case, is work – “I should remember that literature is the dark arts, and is probably not going to save my life or wind me up in some pretty, happy, conventional place” – love – “I love his voice, and how much I want to just crack him open and climb inside him” – sex – “I love how he uses that word for it, cock, and I came, though mildly, just from fucking him last night” – and money – “make enough money to live”. Comprising excerpts from Heti’s own diaries over the past ten years, the Alphabetical Diaries is a baring, brazen window into the author’s life and mind as she ponders big questions about life, love, art, and selfhood (her 2010 breakout book, aptly titled How Should a Person Be?, was similarly soul-searching).

But there’s a catch: instead of publishing her diaries in chronological order, Heti has rearranged them from A to Z, so that every sentence in each chapter begins with a specific letter (all the sentences in the ‘A’ chapter begin with ‘a’, for example). The result is an extraordinary blurring of time and place, where, freed from the conventions of narrative and chronology, readers get to roam around in Heti’s mind freely and at random. Like the stream-of-consciousness narratives deployed by Virginia Woolf and James Joyce – Woolf said of the style, “In one day thousands of ideas have coursed through your brains; thousands of emotions have met, collided, and disappeared in astonishing disorder” – Heti’s writing in the Alphabetical Diaries also comes remarkably close to capturing the experience of being alive; rattling around her subconscious as she oscillates from thought to thought, many of them ten whole years apart, reading the book is a fragmented, chaotic, and truly astonishing experience.

When I ask Heti why she didn’t just publish her diaries as they are, she seems shocked. “There’s no universe in which I would have wanted to do that,” she says. “I mean, what’s the literary value of that?” Instead, she likes to play with literary devices and constraints; there was the flipping of a coin in Motherhood to answer philosophical questions, the recording and transcribing of real-life conversations with friends in How Should a Person Be?, the narrator of Pure Colour getting stuck in a leaf for 40 whole pages, and most recently, her collaboration with an AI chatbot in her story in The New Yorker – which she says could wind up being her next book. Across all her work, she draws from her own life, but nowhere more directly than in the Alphabetical Diaries. “I guess I write about things close to me because I can see them better,” Heti says. “I like the limitations of writing from from within a life. I’m interested in how writing about a life changes the life, or how writing about the self changes how you are.”

                                                         LEAD IMAGESheila HetiPhotography by Angela Lewis

Below, Sheila Heti talks about the ideas behind the Alphabetical Diaries.


Violet Conroy: How did you come up with the idea for the book?

Sheila Heti: It was 2010, and I was just curious about what would happen if I looked at my diaries in a completely different way. Like, what would I learn about the self? Is there a self that stays consistent, or does it change over time? Is there a way to analyse that by alphabetising? These were all the questions that were in my mind as I started the project.

VC: Have you kept a diary for all of your life?

SH: On and off, with a lot more emphasis on off. I mostly write when I have to.

VC: Have to what?

SH: Like, if I have to think through something, or I’m just trying to untangle things in my mind, or if there’s something I really want to remember. But mostly it’s when I have a problem and I need to think something through, and there’s nobody I really want to talk about it with.

VC: Why did you want to do something experimental with form, instead of just publishing your diaries as they are?

SH: I never would have done that. That’s not interesting to me. There’s no universe in which I would have wanted to do that. What would be the point?

VC: Why not?

SH: They’re private. I wouldn’t want to give myself away to people in that way. It’s not interesting, just publishing your diaries. I mean, what’s the literary value of that?


VC: So did using the alphabetical constraints make it feel less revealing?

SH: I don’t think it’s anywhere near as revealing as it would have been if it was just plain diaries. It’s not what I was going for – I’m not trying to reveal. I’m trying to do something with form, I’m trying to do something with language, I’m trying to look at the self in a different way and look at time in a different way. These are my concerns. I’m not trying to tell people about myself. That’s not interesting to me.


VC: When you published an excerpt of your diaries in the New York Times, you wrote that the self is anchored by shockingly few characteristic preoccupations. What did you mean by that?

SH: I don’t know how similar those two things are, the diary self and the self. But at least in a diary, there appear to be certain themes that one returns to over and over and over again. One thinks about relationships, one thinks about work, one thinks about money, or at least I do. And that takes up the bulk of it, like 90 per cent of it. I mean, what else is there? Freud said the only things that really matter in life are work and love, but I think work, love and money is maybe a little more accurate. Who I’m obsessing over, who didn’t email me back, some man you’re trying to figure out, where money is going to come from, how I’m going to write this book ... it’s quite narrow when you look at it without narrative, just sentence by sentence. People are probably more interested in hearing a little bit more about love than they are in hearing about whether I want to live in Toronto or New York … there are just certain themes that are more interesting, more universal, and have more angles to them. I was always trying to think about the balance. 

VC: You also wrote that “the self’s report on itself is surely a great fiction”. Are we guilty of self-mythologising in our diaries?

SH: You’re constantly telling yourself stories about who you are and who other people are. And your story of who you are is different from your partner’s story of who you are. There’s just so much invention. You can’t live without having some idea about who you are and why you’re doing things, but somebody else comes along and thinks you’re a completely different person from the person you think you are. Where’s the truth? So that’s what I mean by the self being an invention. And then the report on oneself [a diary] would also be an invention. You are inventing the self.

VC: In your previous books like Motherhood and How Should a Person Be?, you blur fiction and nonfiction together. Do you see the Alphabetical Diaries as a mix of the two as well?

SH: I don’t really think about things in terms of fiction or nonfiction. Those seem like publishing categories to me, not thinking categories. One doesn’t think: now I’m thinking in a fictional way, now, in thinking in a non-fictional way. You’re just thinking, and it’s always a mix of fact and invention and interpretation, and what you can remember happened and what you think you remember but aren’t remembering accurately. And I feel like writing is an extension of thinking, so if those categories, fiction or nonfiction, are not present in thinking, for me, they’re not really categories that I think about when I’m writing. I’m just trying to think about what’s interesting, what’s engaging, what’s revealing, what’s beautiful.

VC: What keeps bringing you back to autofiction? And how do you feel about that label?

SH: It’s not a label that I feel a lot of connection to. I guess I write about things close to me because I can see them better. And I want to think about life, I’m more interested in life than imagination. I don’t want to be making things up out of whole cloth because there’s a kind of limitlessness to that that doesn’t feel interesting. I like the limitations of writing from from within a lifeI’m interested in how writing about a life changes the life, or how writing about the self changes how you are. And I’m interested in writing with material that already exists. I find the limitlessness of the imagination kind of hard to work with.

VC: You also use literary constraints and devices, like the alphabetical formation with the diaries, or the coin in Motherhood. What draws you to play? 

SH: I don’t know ... I like games. It makes it into a game. [Laughs]. I like playing, I like editing. I like the puzzle of it. I don’t know how to explain it, it’s just what seems fun to me.

VC: I felt like the book came really close to capturing the experience of being alive. Did you want to capture life in a more true way, away from the conventions of chronological structure?

SH: That’s always something I’m interested in. Because our minds do skip around a lot, and we do move through space and time very quickly in our minds. Memory is also very fragmented and crosses time and space very quickly. So yeah, I think it does represent something that feels true, which is a surprise since you wouldn’t think that alphabetising your diary would make something feel more true than narrative, but in some strange way, it does. 

VC: Are there any writers in particular who have inspired you with their innovations in form and writing?

SH: I really like the American writer Kenneth Goldsmith. He wrote a book called Soliloquy which really inspired me. Each book tries to do something new and they’re all reports on the self, or reports on the news or culture in some very unliterary, unwritten way. There’s a lot of found material in his work. I was definitely thinking a lot about his books and Soliloquy in particular when I was working on the Alphabetical Diaries.

VC: What are you working on next?

SH: I’ve been playing around with this AI book that I published a little bit of in The New Yorker and a bit in The Paris Review. I feel like that is something that I’m going to want to finish and figure out, but I go back and forth on it. But that’s just the stage I’m at, you know, the back-and-forth stage. I’d rather not feel compelled, but I do feel compelled. 

Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti is published by Fitzcarraldo Editions, and is out now.

https://www.anothermag.com/design-living/15395/sheila-heti-alphabetical-diaries-interview-fitzcarraldo-editions-pure-colour 

Sunday, February 4, 2024

How the written word can change your life

From newindianexpress.com

Journaling is a powerful tool for self-reflection and getting to know yourself

In the last week of December, I spent approximately 36 hours making a journal from scratch. It involved my local stationary store, 100 gsm bond paper and my book-binding supplies—an awl, book cloth, curved needles, waxed-lined thread. The custom-made journal which emerged from this collaboration would be my companion for the rest of the year to help me plan, analyse, contemplate, create and manifest the life I desired.

Journals have existed since second century AD, the oldest being the ones written by Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius and the diary of Merer which kept track of limestone transported from Tara to Giza for the great pyramids. Eminent people such as Mahatma Gandhi, Beethoven, Marie Curie, Leonardo da Vinci and Winston Churchill have all maintained journals.

Several studies, notable among which is the one done by Pennsylvania State University, have found journaling to be effective to improve mental health, by providing clarity of thought, reducing anxiety, helping to achieve goals, boosting memory and inspiring creativity. Personally, keeping a journal has helped me create my dream life, something I never thought possible.

One of the common complaints in keeping a journal is that it gets mundane, even exhausting to record one’s daily life, where one day is the same as the other, and ‘nothing ever happens’. But a journal could be much more than that. It is an empty cup, waiting for you to fill it with your choice of drink, whether it be a fine whiskey, coffee, desi chai, or plain water.

In my journal, I use a single sentence to record a day. The rest of my entry is split into three parts. In the first, I write down what must be done the next day. In the second I write a list of things I am grateful for. The third part is filled with positive affirmations. The simple act of writing affirmations elevates and invokes feelings of positivity in our brain, which has been conditioned to believe the written word. Use it to your advantage to re-programme your brain by writing in your journal. You could also use beautiful stickers to enhance the look of your page.

What you would require for journaling consistently is commitment. Set an alarm on your phone at the same time every day, at a time that works for you. (For me it is just before bedtime). When it goes off, sit down, and write.

Journaling is a powerful tool for self-reflection and getting to know yourself. The best part is that you do not have to spend 36 hours like I did. Pick up any notebook and simply start. You will be astonished at the changes that take place in your life once you commit to this deceptively simple habit.

Preeti Shenoy

Novelist, Illustrator, Speaker

Instagram: @preeti.shenoy

https://www.newindianexpress.com/magazine/voices/2024/Feb/03/how-the-written-word-can-change-your-life

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Ink, Bytes, and Beyond: Exploring the Terrains of Writer's Fears in the Digital Era

From thedubrovniktimes.com

By Alejandra Gotóo

There are fears as there are people. Some fears are widely shared, and there are others that are a little bit more obscured. It might not be the place, but I want to write about something that makes me afraid. I know this one is not that eerie, and I know, at the same time, it is highly intimate, and I have not stated it before.

Since I was a little girl, I started to create stories in my mind. When I learned how to write, I tried putting them down on paper, and it was then that this started: the blank page. Sometimes, it was just a second before I wrote something and terminated its existence. I guess when I was little, I was less conscious of what I was writing, its value, its meaning, and its audiences. I would like to say that the blank page was better then, but I do not remember much. I remember not having ideas for days, and then, all of a sudden, a flow of ideas came out of the blue and saturated me. Overflowed me. I could not breathe. This usually happened when I was already lying in bed waiting for sleep. I tried hard not to sleep and order some of these ideas. I wanted to remember something in the morning. Anything.

As a teenager, I tried keeping a diary, but I became aware of possible audiences, and I found myself censoring some of my thoughts. What if someone came across those pages? I did not want anyone to have such a clear view of myself. Perhaps I was trying not to see something. What if writing thoughts down makes them into something real?

Ink, Bytes, and BeyondInk, Bytes, and BeyondAlejandra Gotóo


Writing for a living is less fashionable than in the last century. More audiences, media, and writers. And then I feel diluted. On the one hand, I am first a reader and then a writer. What should I read? Which readings hold more value than others? Who is the author to suit my fancy?

On the other hand, I feel so much pressure as a writer. What should I offer to readers? Which of the combinations of words must I create to capture attention? Who is on the other side of the page?

To be afraid of the act of writing is one thing. Yet, is to be frightened of the other side of the writing equation to be scared of people?

Moreover, our digital era emphasizes instant gratification and short-form content. In this landscape, where information flows rapidly and attention spans wane, the author finds themselves navigating a terrain vastly different from the one they traversed in their earlier writing endeavors. The fear of thecreting was once a solitary challenge. Now, it contends with the pressure of creating content that captures fleeting online attention. The immediacy of digital platforms demands concise and attention-grabbing narratives, leaving the author grappling with the question of how to translate the richness of their inner world into bytes and pixels. The fear of being diluted in a sea of online voices becomes a palpable concern, prompting contemplation on the intrinsic value of their words amidst the noise of social media and whirlwind content consumption.

Ink Bytes and Beyond Exploring the Terrains of Writers Fears in the Digital Era 1

While some might find this overwhelming, it could be an asset. Nowadays, there are more readers than before, and there is less analphabetism. I have heard that readers nowadays do not read essential pieces, which might or might not be accurate. Be that as it may, people read all the time. Unlike before, we read more letters (Facebook posts), telegrams (Whatsapp messages), and periodicals (articles). Perhaps fewer books, nevertheless definitely more written content. I might just be trying to have a magical religious thought here. Still, I refuse to think that having more written material is intrinsically negative. It is different. Yet, different is not always worse. And right now, we might connect with readers in a way impossible before.

Amidst the shadows of fear, there exist moments of triumph and resilience that deserve acknowledgment. Despite its intimidating vastness, confronting the blank page becomes a journey of self-discovery and creative evolution. Transforming intangible thoughts into tangible words is, in essence, a victory—it shows the courage required to share.

Alejandra Gotóo (Mexico City, 1991) writes to explain herself the world where she inhabits. Her work has been published in Spain, Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Peru, and Croatia. She holds a master's degree in Social Anthropology and a bachelor's degree in English Literature. Nowadays, she is a columnist in Dubrovnik Times. She has two published novels, Ruptura and Isadore or Absolute Love. Her topics of interest include nature, adventure, language, books, food, culture, animals, conservation, and women's rights. She also writes in her blog: Cardinal Humours.

https://www.thedubrovniktimes.com/lifestyle/opinion/item/15963-ink-bytes-and-beyond-exploring-the-terrains-of-writer-s-fears-in-the-digital-era