Tuesday, 4 September 2012

thinking and writting

I think, therefore I write

"To tell it is to live through it all again. Actions are the first tragedy in life, words are the second. Words are perhaps the worst. Words are merciless" Oscar Wilde.   "Lady Windermere's Fan"
It seems quite obvious to me that writing and thinking are one and the same.  With every new sight we see, every new word we read or every unknown fact we learn,  new ideas and feelings spark up.  We can't help but be moved and, somehow, become different than we were before.  However (and it is a big however) all those things are inside our head;  they aren't real, they have no substance or shape until you sit down and write them.

When you put things on paper you must be able to set boundaries to your ideas and organize them in a logical order that a reader can follow, in other words you are giving form to what has previously been  immaterial. This is the reason why writing is the most powerful tool we have to understand ourselves and to give meaning to a universe that, at first glance, seems chaotic.

When we write we are forced to confront our own emotions and our own thoughts. Believe me, there is nothing scarier than to see your own heart and your own mind on a blank sheet of paper.  At the same time, we are obliged to acknowledge others because, really, whenever we write we are standing on the shoulders of everything we have ever read or heard.

On the same note,  the other aspect of writing we can't ignore is the fact that we never write for ourselves.  An author never writes a word that isn't intended for someone else.  In that sense, the moment you pick up a pen you are inevitably sharing who and what you are.  Intellectually,  it is the most intimate act ever.

Finally, I would like to say that writing is mankind's collective consciousness; without it, each time we said or did something it would be like the first time.

 Every time we write we build a bridge, so make it a point to stop and ask yourself: who is going to cross? and where does it lead?.


                                   


1 comment:

  1. I find your writing very neat, they way you organized your ideas made it easy for me to follow and understand. I also consider, you made a good relationship between thinking and writing and gave worthy arguments to support it and I liked they way you wrapped up your text.

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