I was thinking about the technology of writing recently. Many years ago a writer would have written this blog on a bit of paper, with a pencil, sitting under a tree.
Very low tech. Being a writer used to be about fnding your muse. All of the writer's energy went into creativity. The means of recording that expression was so basic that it was seldom even considered.
Today, a writer has many choices. He can still write upon paper with a pencil but eventually he has to transfer it to a computer to actually do anything with it. So most writers usually write directly to computer.
Which leaves us with many choices. First, we have a choice of computers. Do we go desk top or lap top? Do we go dial up or high speed, such as cable internet? Do we go hard wired or wireless? Do we go windows or Mac?
Unfortunately, by the time we make all of these decisions, which either basically anchors us to a desk or gives us the freedom to write untethered (but still within 150feet of the router) we have expended so much energy on the means of writing that we may have lost our muse.
For the non-writers who are reading this, our muse is that little voice inside our head that tells us what to write. Sometimes we have friendly muses and write nice little ditties about gardening and stuff. Sometimes our muse moonlights as a serial killer. Mine used to be a stand up comic in a little known section of Hell. He has a wicked sense of humor -- so blame him.
But technology and creative writing have seemingly gone down different paths. I am in the early stages of writing a novel and have literally spent two months reviewing software. Shouldn't I have spent that time writing?
So I have decided to throw off the shackles of technology and am dictating this blog to my wife, who is writing it on a scrap of paper as we sit by the pool. She will eventually transfer it to the internet via a computer but I don't care. Today I am low tech.
1 comment:
To write successfully you have to keep up with the current technology that is in place, otherwise what ever you write is just not complete. Once you have the equipment and the format then you can get back to the basics of writing as if you were using a pencil and paper except that you can make revisions to what you write a lot easier because of the computer. Even your effort for this blog item resulted in high technology. You did the pencil and paper work but in order for it to be posted you still had to use current technology. Dumping that function off to your understanding wife does not constitute avoiding writing in the high tech form.
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