Monday, September 25, 2006

Blog As Personal Journal

Earliest Journal(cover page):
Earliest JournalWe know that weblogs, or more popularly, blogs, are a product of the present century. Spread out and popularized through the medium of the Internet.

But just as surely, we know that personal journals have been with us for a long, long time. So long, perhaps, that remaining documents attesting to this have become ageless, timeless, and never the mind.

The biggest change over time, of course, has been that while personal journals were simply that, personal, the present ones, the blogs, are as public as public can get. Everybody with an Internet connection has access to them, whether the creators are so inclined or not.

So, bloggers, out there if you still want to maintain a modicum of privacy in your very personal and intimate scribbling then at the very least, place your blogsite behind some kind of intranet wall so that only those you have chosen can access them. And/or add some log-in protection via user name and password.

If you have a URL, then as its name suggests your blog can be uniformly located by anybody with an Internet connection. And even if you do not advertise your blog, those diligent search engines will do their best to point a finger toward your direction.

So now, blogs are great and fashionable, and commonplace; and millions have joined in to try their own.

But what about those who shun the Internet, but have always kept their own personal journals? Or those who do want to keep personal journals but do not want to plaster them where the entire world can read them?

I am sure you are still out there, thriving in private and with no vain desire to share your innermost thoughts with the world, nor any fearless desire to make known what and how you are doing.

Well, then, kindred souls, feel not being alone and left out. Count me as one among you, still a fervent disciple of personal journals that are still personal and private.

Some time ago when I recollected on this practice and made an inventory, I discovered some very interesting and nostalgic insights. Insights that I would like to share, though still behind a hazy veil of anonymity and blurry words.
Current Journal:
Latest Journal
Scrounging through old files from the old homeland, I was able to salvage among other miscellany the cover page of a very early journal book in the early 70’s, the earliest I can find.
Samples of Earlier Journals:
Earlier Journal1Earlier Journal2Earlier Journal3Earlier Journal4

That and succeeding journals show certain common threads. They were all written using words block-printed, rather than in the typical cursive fashion. They were written on a daily basis, using some determinable format. But on papers or books that varied in size, thickness, and ruling. Using either fountain pen, or ballpoint pens, but never pencil. And typically, I noticed on media that were not purposely intended to be used as personal journal, but rather as schedulers, school notebooks, and even hardbound ledgers. Lately, though I have been looking around for journal books intended primarily for the purpose.

The subject matters? As diverse as the faces in a UN general assembly meeting. But definitely topics/concerns, which at the time of writing were floating and craving for attention in my mind. Just like what a personal journal should contain.

So to this day, daily I continue to trudge along, lending and committing words to paper, in the same self-same tedious manner of manually printing out words.

To all of us out there, carry on and more power!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I've kept personal journals, on and off, through the years. I currently have a notebook in which I write random thoughts that aren't quite ready to be blogged.

Blogging is a good thing in general, because it has people writing - better than vegetating in front of TV.

Amadeo said...

Hi, Aurea:

Not a day passes that I do not write a time-stamped entry in my personal journal.

The rote allows me to focus early to start the day right, and this dovetails quite well with the other daily routine that I slavishly cling to - reading short passages from 4 inspirational books, which chore pre-dates the journal writing.

but welcome, kindred soul.