= The Logging Habit = This is day two for my gopher phlogging. Like any new habit, it's exciting and fun for the first couple days. But what about the long term as days turn to weeks and weeks to months? Well, I can't predict the future. But I do believe in the general concept of habits and my ability to form them. I didn't used to. Until 2011, I'd tried and failed to keep journal since childhood. I did manage one 8-month run in a spiral-bound notebook sometime in my late twenties. The duration remained my personal record for a long time. Nothing came of the journal. People say you should keep a journal for a lot of reasons: * It's a place to keep track of ideas * It helps you think/organize * You can use them as therapy * Keep track of how you use time and progress you've made * Plan your life * Use it as a commonplace book (a personal scrapbook of text) * Learn to be grateful (see therapy above) I think the reason they appealed to me was knowing that some famous thinkers were well-known journal-keepers. Also, I liked the idea of creating something personal slowly over time. Aside: While certainly not role-model material, I was always fascinated with the imagery of the huge collection of journals created by the fictional character John Doe in the 1995 film Seven. SOMERSET Well, there are at least five thousand notebooks in this room, and near as I can tell, each notebook contains two hundred and fifty pages. -- the Seven film script The journals (consistantly "notebooks" in the script) turn out to be not very helpful: "No dates indicated, placed on the shelves in no discernible order. It's just his mind poured out on paper. I don't think it's going to give us any specifics." But the _imagery_ and the _idea_ of that volume of personal writing. That stuck in my head. The Plan: ------------------------------------------------------------------ So in 2011 I was really starting to feel that time was slipping away from me. I had all these plans and I didn't seem to have enough focus or willpower or grit or whatever to make any progress on them. After wasting an inordinate amount of time on "productivity porn," I finally decided to give the old journaling/logging thing another go. The idea was to use a log as part of a "quantified self" time-tracking experiment. I was heavily inspired by some people who had colorful charts showing every minute of every day broken down by category. The time log: ------------------------------------------------------------------ So I put a little notebook in my pocket and started writing down every single context switch in my life and the time it occurred. I kept with it for four years. I transcribed everything into the computer and wrote several generations of scripts to make charts and graphs from the data. I played with tagging and different timestamp formats. It took a lot of time (ironic, no?) and I never did reap any specific benefit from doing it. I guess you need to start such an endeavor with specific goals and some idea of how to reach those goals (who knew!?). :-) But from that habit came a powerful desire to keep doing that habit out of the sheer desire to keep the habit going! So after a lot of soul-searching (hey, this was four years of logging every single minute I got into a car, fell alseep, or ate a meal!), I decided to radically cut down on the data I was collecting... The current log: ------------------------------------------------------------------ I still keep a notebook and mechanical pencil in my pocket at all times. I still transcribe the previous day's entry into my computer at the beginning of the next day. But I don't record the time something occurred (with some exceptions) and I try to limit myself to the highlights of the day. I'm intentionally not mentioning specifics in this method because that's something I want to write up in detail at a later date. I think it would also be fun to take a picture of my collection of 62 (currently) little pocket notebooks and show what a typical entry looks like. What's come of it: ------------------------------------------------------------------ I now have over seven years logged. I've recorded every major event in that time. If I can figure out which keywords to search for, I can find the event and tell you on which date it occurred and what happened right before and after that event. That's pretty neat. I also have an extremely reliable place to put notes - what could be handier than a notebook in your pocket? I don't lose track of TODOs because I see them when I transcribe my log the next day. And perhaps just as importantly as those quasi-tangible benefits, I've built up a slightly enhanced ability to create new habits! It reminds me of when I first taught myself the C programming language from the "White Book" (The C Programming Language by K&R). That was a watershed moment in my life at which I finally realized that I could teach myself anything I wanted to learn. (Before that, as hard as it is now to remember, I had no idea that was possible and was under the common delusion that some subjects were too hard to learn on one's own.) So keeping at this gopher logging business is something I _can_ do. But like many other habits I've aquired and shed since the logging one, only time will tell if this earns its place in my precious schedule. * * * Sheesh, this got long fast. That always happens to me. I think "I'm not sure I have much to say about this." and the next thing you know I've written off on a dozen different tangents and I'm struggling to keep it shorter. Speaking of tangents, I just remembered a previous success I had with a logging habit: a reading journal I've kept since a class assignment in 1993. It's just a simple Title, Author, and Page Count log, so it was easy to keep. So I suppose I wasn't suuuch a failure all along. :-)