Try to learn something about everything, and everything about somethingThomas Huxley “Darwin's bulldog” (1824-1895)

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Diaries

I write this in the hope that anyone reading it might be inspired to start diary writing if they don't already or to continue, and to discuss their process, if they do

There's a copy in the main wiki for posterity…. diary

What is a diary as a rule?

A document useful to the person who keeps it.

Dull to the contemporary who reads it…

…and invaluable to the student, centuries afterwards, who treasures it.

Walter Scott

I keep a diary

I like to store memories on paper, for later. Mundane daily life or exciting events.

I started in 1992, my mid-20's but then I let it lapse after a few inconsistent years of intermittent diary writing. Looking back the snatches of life I recorded from those days are (to me) fascinating and I regret not having kept it up.

I started *bullet journaling* in 2016, a few days before my 50th birthday.

my first bullet journal entry 22 February 2016

After about a year of this small A6 format *bullet-points-with-longer-bits-and sketches-every-now-and-again* I started *proper* daily diary writing later in 2017. Bullet-journaling is still one aspect of my practice, but not for task-management - just for remembering what I did.

I've been at it ever since.

I'll be 60 shortly, so that's coming up to 10 year's worth of life captured, in 45 A-5 sized Volumes (I'm now on Volume 46)

My general process

  • I write short bullet points at the beginning of the day, and add others if necessary at other times. These can be quickly scanned when searching for things at a later data.
  • I do small sketches (usually pen & ink & watercolour) of little things that will jog my memory later

a broken part from my 30 year old CD player...

  • I write a long-form entry each morning telling the story of the previous day, usually between 2-5 pages, after the bullet-sketch-quick-view page(s)
  • I stick in ephemera
    • cinema tickets
    • photographs
    • till receipts
    • bus tickets
    • labels & tags from significant purchases
  • I write longer angsty brain-dumps on whatever topic is on my mind, to try and think-through something that's bothering me

In more bullet-journal style…..

Things I track

  • I keep track of various regular occurrences
  • I keep track of purchases, online orders etc
  • I keep a record of medications and medical treatments and consultations and symptoms

my 2-weekly injection

  • I keep track of the scores of our almost daily chess games

a cuppa and doughnut over a game of chess - and I lost 2-1!

  • I note the weather each day
  • I track what days I work (I'm self-employed, so it's a bit variable)
  • if I've walked the dogs
  • if I got to bed before 11pm
  • I track if I cooked tea
  • if I went swimming
  • I note the family finances each week
  • and the electricity meter reading
  • and heating oil level and when the last delivery was
  • I note when I last changed the cooker's propane gas bottle
  • and when I last had a haircut (in the kitchen, by my own hand, with clippers)
  • and when the dog last had a haircut (at the groomer's for the sum of £60, every roughly 6 weeks)
  • I note the deaths of *“significant”* celebrities

I get through an A5 Leuchtturm hard-back in around 9 weeks.

My motivation?

Everything can be interesting when viewed later, from the future, even my own humdrum life.

I can now look back at almost 10 years of my “middle-age” life, in my 50s.

When I see the first frog spawn of the year…

9<sup>th</sup> March 2021

25<sup>th</sup> February 2023

and when I made the Christmas Cake

When the car broke down, how often I've agitated the septic-tank to break up fat-blockages (yes, indeed, the joys of isolated rural living). I can find that time when we kept pigs, or the dog had a cruciate ligament rupture (and the subsequent repair & recovery).

a regular blood test gets a sketch each time

And there's the strange blank period of a couple of months in mid-2018, when I'd had a heart-attack and I seemed unable to write anything in my diary about it (or anything else). Until I was back to normal again. I think I felt that I would remember everything anyway, without writing it down. I'm glad I did write a quick precis of the events of those weeks, even if it took a few months to get it down on paper.

And Covid-Times.....

I'm inspired by Mass Observation, the diaries of Alan Bennet, the writings of Simon Garfield, the passionate call-to arms in Irving Finkel's video (see below).

Indexing

In December 2023 I decided that I need a way of finding old entries/events/facts etc. so I started an Index…. more later in a blog post…

Finding Things In A Diary

Influences

Alan Bennet

  • Writing Home
  • Keeping on Keeping on
  • House Arrest

Simon Garfield

  • Wartime Mass-Observation diary collections
  • The diary of Jean Lucey Pratt A Notable Woman. Jean was one of the Mass Observation diarists in the Wartime collections above (anonymized as “Maggie Joy Blunt”), but Jean also kept a separate diary covering her whole life, starting in 1925 aged 15 until she died in 1986.

The Great Diary Project

The wonderful Irving Finkel mini lecture on You Tube Rescuing unwanted diaries gives a feel of why I think capturing everyday life, in ordinary peoples' diaries, is important.

The result of Irving's discovery of the importance of diaries is the The Great Diary Project

The Man Who Saves Life Stories

The American Diary Project

There is a similar project in the USA [The American Diary Project](https://americandiaryproject.com/)

Anne Lister

Now well known after the BBC dramatization as “Gentleman Jack” - Anne Lister lived in the 18th Century, was a land-owning woman (unusual) and most famously, gay.

Her diaries were written partly in a “secret” code, to hide the more personal aspects.

They were researched and sections published in 2 volumes by Helena Whitbread.

Anne Lister

I've read the first volume, and it's a fascinating insight into life in the 1820s - leaving aside the sexual aspects - just the practicalities of life, the leeches and quack medical treatments. The amount of walking needed to get anywhere, the poor diets (even for the wealthy). The physical discomfort tolerated (even by the wealthy).

John Gadd

I recently discovered John Gadd and his diary.

He seems to have kept a very similar style of journal to mine - writing daily in one book storing EVERYTHING, writing, photos, tickets, labels…. and a record of his day, his thoughts and only touching on “world news” if it particularly meant something to him.

He called it his “Omnium Gatherum”.

He died aged 90 on 2020, after keeping his diary consistently since 1947, really settling on its eventual format in the early 1970s. His diary was a memory-aid, as is mine, but of course it also captures lots of other things, mundane at the time but over a lifetime the mundane becomes the historical, and illustrate how life changes.

I'd love to see the books and look through the pages, and see how he indexed everything to make it searchable and to find anything within a few minutes.

My Diaries

Some pics:

adding typed pages **and** photo of Frog-Spawn Day

 more blood tests.... will it never end?

adding typed pages, glued into the diary

Xmas Cake Day!

More Pics

Further Reading

On Indexing

General


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