Dear Diary

With everyone having phones now the ability to capture amazing scenes is always just a pocket away. When something is too easy though, it starts to loose power. Phone-cams went from being at the ready in case something fantastically dramatic should occur to being merely the facilitator of the mostly mundane minutia of people’s live being on a non-stop social media scroll.

One of the biggest and most far reaching negatives of this is how it effects people being in the stream of life. I travel, often. An overly familiar sight now is people rushing around a famous museum or well known area (Luxembourg Garden et al) stopping to raise their phone slightly above themselves while duck billing, snap a pic, then rushing off. Their justification is that they are capturing memories. So preoccupied are they in getting the perfect pics to post that they are not in the moment, not in the stream of life.

Once back home they can show you them standing by some landmark, some great work of art but there can be no description which makes you feel as if there. Even for them, this is the case and they had actually been there.

The adage that travel broadens the mind is not merely about ticking off things on a list of what to see, where to go. It is absorbing a place with all its ambient characteristics which hopefully in some way add to you long after the trip is over.

I am not anti-photo, I take some myself wherever I am. But see and capture with your eyes first. I always have a 3×5 pad in my pocket. I will do small sketches when on the road and take notes. Not always dramatic, sometimes it’s just a room service tray with the leftover bones of a hastily eaten meal or my book bag hanging off the back of a chair.

Not everyone can draw, but you should still keep a little pad on you. Use it to take notes. In doing this you will actually be more present in the moment if you slow your roll and take a beat to describe what you are seeing. As you are doing this just for yourself, even if you can’t draw, why not try anyways?

That is another negative of social media, everything seems to be motivated now towards getting views/likes. The recently departed Paul Auster said “Do a thing simply for the beauty of doing it.” To live this way, you may not garner as many likes etc but you will create true memories.

6 thoughts on “Dear Diary

  1. I always have a pen and pad with me to take notes as you never know when someone is going to say something that I might use in a future story. Sometimes I even write things down on a napkin if I hear of a place I might want to visit. I love exploring our world in a relaxed manner.

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  2. I totally agree with your view on selfies. I don’t know why anyone needs so may photos to prove that they were there. However, I do wish I’d taken more photos of places I’d been when I was travelling. I became a travel photographer later in life, after I’d lived in Beijing. At the time I thought the same .. who needs so many photos of places I’m in, instead I’ll experience it fully in the moment. A diary or journal would have helped but I was too busy back then.

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    1. I think it’s delicate balance, not always realized except in hindsight. I do some photos on the road, but I make a point of having intentional photo free days where I’m just absorbing a place. And I take little impressionistic notes, in general.

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