Comment by obsidianbases1

1 day ago

Pen and paper for writing. Computer for editing.

Paper notebook. I wouldn’t recommend loose sheets of paper. :) After 15 years of writing notes on loose sheets I would start differently :)

Go Tim Ferris way - notebook where the first page is left for the table of contents, and number all even-numbered pages as first step.

  • My thoughts are so all over the place that I've settled on 3x5 note cards. It also makes the transition to the computer much easier, because I can re-arrange them in a way that is somewhat organized before taking a picture that gets transcribed

    • Possibility to re-arrange is ofc good when working on something in progress.

      But how do you archive these cards? That always drove me mad so I use them only for something “encyclopaedical” otherwise it is too much messy.

I hate handwriting with a passion. I have my whole life. I have horrible handwriting and my hand gets sore 5 seconds after I start writing.

I am sure it is because I don't hold my pen/pencil correctly, but I think after 43 years I am not going to suddenly fix that.

  • I am similar. If I physically write a couple times a week, my hand adapts though. It's a skill like any other.

    Fountain pens are nice too since you don't need any pressure.

    My writing looks a lot better if I just force myself to slow down and be deliberate, but honestly it's a constant battle. I'd definitely benefit from practicing penmanship on it's own.

    • Worth mentioning - for a long time, I found my handwriting messy AND my hand would tire out. When I was about a teen-ager, I decided to write in call-caps, very clearly. I've been doing that for a long time now, and worth giving a try.

      2 replies →

  • Me too. And I can type so much faster and without thinking about it than I can write.

    I've had many writing classes in school and different holders for the pen etc but I never managed to improve at all. Writing is just not for everyone.