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thedeadhaji
39489 Posts
The statistic on blogs is staggering. With the hundreds of millions of blogs out there, most people subscribe to a blog, know someone who writes a blog, or god forbid, they themselves write a blog. While I think that the proliferation of venues of expression is an overall positive thing, I do simultaneously think that many have become oblivious to the purpose and audience to which they are writing. In more concrete terms, I want to stress the importance of public versus private writing. If an idea doesn't make sense to be made public, for one reason another, it doesn't mean that it shouldn't be put into words. I, and many others far more influential and learned than myself, believe firmly that writing is a way of crystalizing, vocalizing, and remembering one's thoughts and realizations. These virtues alone make writing undeniably and unequivocally important. Something that shouldn't be posted on a public blog, then, is quite simply a private thought. Considering that public media platforms, Twitter, Facebook, and the like, are all the rage, writing for yourself and yourself only may sound almost outrageous. But all it means is that we're taking a small step back to the olden days when in fact most of our thoughts were to and for ourselves. I think a lot of us may have forgotten what it was like to keep a physical, personal diary. Private writing is a choice that is now often forgotten, but one that shouldn't be. There are limitations to what can be said publicly; our thoughts would become stifled and malformed if we cannot exercise the full breadth of possible thought. Any thought by nature has and should be written up, if you so choose. But after putting the first messy draft together, we should take a step back and ask ourselves, "What would be the purpose of making this public?" If we can't come up with a strong, legitimate answer, it probably means that the words should be kept private. If written on a computer, this just means that you'll have a place in your HDD where you'll keep such personal musings. I personally think that writing with a physical pen and a physical diary is a meditative and soothing experience. Overall, it has given me more positive effects than a screen and keyboard. But then again, these days the vast majority of my writing is done electronically, primarily for the convenience that is the alacrity with which I'm able to put letters together. Getting the words out is the primary goal; any additional improvements can and should be considered later. As a personal example, I wrote a 1500+ word braindump last night, that I won't ever make public. But I will freely admit that it was a therapeutic experience. Perhaps more importantly, the act of writing my thoughts have condensed and inscribed the concepts into my brain. This is invaluable, considering the statistic that humans only retain 3% of what goes through our consciousness. It's an increasingly public world, but in spite of this, or perhaps because of this, there is a need for a private world within the world at large. When these two worlds collide, or when we become unaware of the distinction, problems arise. I still believe that all my online characters can be merged into one. I have some concerns, but the overall concept is one that I still have faith in. However, it didn't occur to me until recently that there still needs to be a place of expression for the private self, where the truest of my thoughts lie. There is a distinct line between the private and the public that we must be aware of. Anything that leaves the firm grasp of our control, anything that sees a second pair of eyes, is public. Having a clear distinction of which side of this line we stand at any given time, is an ever more important aspect of self-awareness that we must incessantly exercise, in our increasingly public world.
Crossposted from my main blog
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So i did try writing a bit, once upon re-reading what i wrote i came across the though "yeah i find that interesting but i don't think it's bringing anything, i don't think one would learn something through this".
I think it's hard to draw the line beforehand between what should go public or not. Really enjoyed this blog entry I actually never though about the difference between public and private writing
5/5 !
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Well thought out and I agree. I have always done the majority of my writing within notepad for myself or in a book I keep for such occasions. It allows me to get out what Im thinking without having to worry about whether Im rambling, editing, or generally have a point. Afterwards if I think it should be public I go through and rewrite it but usually its just for me to figure something out on my own. An internal dialogue as it were.
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On March 13 2012 01:13 Marou wrote:So i did try writing a bit, once upon re-reading what i wrote i came across the though "yeah i find that interesting but i don't think it's bringing anything, i don't think one would learn something through this". I think it's hard to draw the line beforehand between what should go public or not. Really enjoyed this blog entry I actually never though about the difference between public and private writing 5/5 !
I don't think this is what that blog was about.
That blog was about keeping some sort of privacy, not making public everything you write, or think. And in the mean time, still keep writing your thoughts, but just for yourself.
I feel you talk more about the quality of your writing, which is a different thing. Regarding the quality : fabricando fit faber. Also, you could simply try and put things online, to test the reactions?
OT, when I was in Norway, alone, I wrote a lot... everyday, every little things that were happening, my thoughts, facts, things I needed to do, how I felt... Being far away from family and friends, writing that down just happened naturally.
I never did that before and never did it again. Edit : and it's a shame, because I feel it was useful. It forced me to structure my thoughts, double check them, make sure they are somewhat coherent, temper them... sort of, because I always thought someone else could read them, even if they weren't meant to be "public".
Public is not the correct word here, too wide. My written thoughts were actually meant to be private, not intimate. Another level of distinction...
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Excellent blog, but there is one thing that I don't quite understand. You write Perhaps more importantly, the act of writing my thoughts have condensed and inscribed the concepts into my brain. This is invaluable, considering the statistic that humans only retain 3% of what goes through our consciousness. This assumes that If you do not retain the memory of a thought or thought process, then it will not impact you in the long run. I used to be very violent (when I was 4 or so I would bite people, hit my sisters who are 5 and 8 years older than me), but at some point I changed. I do not remember any reason why I changed, but I am not very violent now. In short, I did not retain the exact reasons for changing my behavior, but the behavior has not returned to the original state.
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Very interesting and true for almost every part. One area I feel is a bit more lenient is when you tell someone something you want to do, or maybe you tell many people. This causes that private thing you wanted to do to become public. So if you choose not to do it, you feel you have let down yourself and the "public" whereas if you didn't share you would only have let yourself down. This is maybe a bit of a motivation booster, but other than that, I see all your other points.
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On March 13 2012 00:57 thedeadhaji wrote: But after putting the first messy draft together, we should take a step back and ask ourselves, "What would be the purpose of making this public?" If we can't come up with a strong, legitimate answer, it probably means that the words should be kept private. I don't know why, but after I read these lines, the penisman came to my mind. If you haven't met him yet, go here. Anyways, good read. And yes, I feel that private writing is disappearing due to all those social networks.
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Agree 100% man, well written and you always talk about good stuff. 5/5 <3
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It's important to remember that some people won't always respect your privacy. Some people will search for what you keep private. I made that mistake in the past, and now I've learned how to encrypt a partition.
Very useful talent toi have.
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I coin those 1500+ word pieces bowel movement writing and yes it helps cleanse the soul.
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thedeadhaji
39489 Posts
On March 13 2012 01:54 Murlox wrote:Show nested quote +On March 13 2012 01:13 Marou wrote:So i did try writing a bit, once upon re-reading what i wrote i came across the though "yeah i find that interesting but i don't think it's bringing anything, i don't think one would learn something through this". I think it's hard to draw the line beforehand between what should go public or not. Really enjoyed this blog entry I actually never though about the difference between public and private writing 5/5 ! I don't think this is what that blog was about. That blog was about keeping some sort of privacy, not making public everything you write, or think. And in the mean time, still keep writing your thoughts, but just for yourself. I feel you talk more about the quality of your writing, which is a different thing. Regarding the quality : fabricando fit faber. Also, you could simply try and put things online, to test the reactions? OT, when I was in Norway, alone, I wrote a lot... everyday, every little things that were happening, my thoughts, facts, things I needed to do, how I felt... Being far away from family and friends, writing that down just happened naturally. I never did that before and never did it again. Edit : and it's a shame, because I feel it was useful. It forced me to structure my thoughts, double check them, make sure they are somewhat coherent, temper them... sort of, because I always thought someone else could read them, even if they weren't meant to be "public". Public is not the correct word here, too wide. My written thoughts were actually meant to be private, not intimate. Another level of distinction...
I have a similar experience. Foreign country, alone and in some depression-related state, I kept a diary regularly for the first time in my life. I think it was a coping mechanism.
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the Dagon Knight4000 Posts
I write about a thousand words a day, sometimes a little less, but most of the time it stays private.
I use it to hash out short stories, blog posts, whatever else I'm thinking about, and then I see where it goes from there. There are things that make it out of that daily writing, but they're fewer than they could be.
I suppose it's ironic that we're sitting here talking about privacy while both of us use Twitter quite actively
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thedeadhaji
39489 Posts
On March 13 2012 19:02 SirJolt wrote:I write about a thousand words a day, sometimes a little less, but most of the time it stays private. I use it to hash out short stories, blog posts, whatever else I'm thinking about, and then I see where it goes from there. There are things that make it out of that daily writing, but they're fewer than they could be. I suppose it's ironic that we're sitting here talking about privacy while both of us use Twitter quite actively
I retweet your stuff about 10x more than I do anyone else's. Quality imo; and your post above explains why they're of high quality - because they're cherrypicked
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