Write It Down!!!

Write It Down!!!

Years ago, I jotted notes, doodled on a wire bound notebook.  It was no big deal.  I was terrible with grammar, got “C” grades by the grace of God.  I couldn’t write a decent sentence to save my life.  As years passed, I collected a huge box of these note pads, composition books and journals.  On occasion, I’d pick one up, and funny thing, some of these journals were over 30 years old and I remembered when, where, and why I wrote on it.  As anecdotal this was, it proved how important it was to keep a journal even if what and how I wrote were terribly embarrassing.  My handwriting was at best chicken scratches and the content right above “see Jane run” competent.

I’ve done research, of course on the Internet, and found that keeping a journal free hand, albeit illegible, benefited over those that typed.  Arguably, the computer or any electronic device had features like spell and grammar check, word searches, phrases at the blink of an eye.  And fast?  You bet.  Way faster than writing long hand, and so much cleaner.  Downside was disassociation.  It was like the guy on television, throwing a chicken in a portable oven and saying, “put it in and forget about it.”  Typing, at least for me, did not help my memory.  With the article not in front of me, a study suggested that those who wrote notes, freehand, on a pad had better recollection than those who typed though those, who used a keyboard, captured, considerably, more notes.  It was even noted that a person, who doodled or wrote one word on a page, recollected better than those who typed pages of notes. 

On occasion, during those moments of inspiration, I’d write quickly and typed after speed writing long hand. This process worked for me, as in the past when I faced a blank screen, I ended up with writers block.

I examined journals of many types and recognized their uses.  They were as different as you can imagine with rules and no rules.  I saw one example that logged words on pages, sequences and verses that made no sense, written without consideration of any sentence structure.  He penned expressions whether it made sense or not. 

On the other hand, I used complete sentences (at least I tried) for future references, others to read and appreciate.  I would break it up with pictures, outlines, mind maps, with some purpose like what I saw on the news, the score between two teams, a 1-800 number, website address, weather report, something I learned.  The reasons were endless.  Important at the time?  Definitely.  Important later on?  Perhaps.  Would I have remembered this information had I not written it down?  Most likely not. Would I be able to use them to pen a novel or non-fiction book later on?  Let me put it this way. Like what Yul Brynner, who played Pharaoh in the movie “Ten Commandments,” said, “So shall it be written, so shall it be done.”

Since high school, probably because I took an inordinate sum of headshots playing football at 125 lbs. against cape buffalos smashing against my defenseless body, I was not good at remembering things, and I learned to write things down: on a pad, discarded napkin, sandwich bag, side of a newspaper, whatever available; and unless I wrote things down, nothing stuck.  Years ago, I could have taken classes and taught myself better memory.  I learned, through all these years that simply writing things down served a lifelong purpose of recollection.

How simple is that?  

Keeping a journal is as good as it gets.

So for goodness sake…write it down!

Kris Dale

Sales and Marketing Consultant

8y

I believe in this principle. There's something in the process of writing it down that triggers the brain to transfer the information to the memory. I learned this while earning my credential to teach secondary school. It takes about a minute of time for it to be processed. While I was in school, I would feverishly record notes, writing as much as I could down quickly. I was told this was not a good process, that I should just bullet point notes and not write everything down. I would cram as much as possible without deviation. I wanted to remember the teaching moments I was experiencing from my teacher's lecture. I've tried doing the same with typing. And it works to some degree. I still feel more empowered and free when I go offline to write on paper. It's a more restricted and pure form.

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When I wrote this piece, I wondered how many professionals practice this simple but important practice. Benefits are incredible. Thank you for your feedback.

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Curtis Puckett 858-254-2220

Real Estate Mortgage Broker, Banker, Investment Lender, Loan Officer Fha-Va Loans

8y

Thank you for that great insight. I have been doing exactly the same thing for the past 25 years. I have a "collection" of Steno pads with exactly the same thing. I too can recollect lost ideas or people from scribbled notes on a paper. I have also carried a small recorder that I record all meeting and then play back while in my car to the next appointment. This helps me by making sure I "heard" what was being said to me and great for follow up later on with my clients. It is so great when you connect with a fellow dodo bird.

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