Sometimes I get super paranoid about forgetting the important moments in my life. I'll
write a diary entry for the first time in two years or I'll promise
myself I'll start scrapbooking. When I'm on vacation, I'm in constant
conflict about taking lots of pictures or just enjoying the moment.
Seeing the world through a camera lens, I don't experience it fully,
but I know from previous trips that I often forget what I don't record.
But I don't necessarily have to record every detail in order to remember things well. Sometimes one snapshot will remind me of an entire day. Also, the point is not always to physical record, but the act of recording it. When you take notes in class, you shouldn't try for a direct transcript, you should instead make your brain active in
choosing what information to write, strengthening the encoding process. This blog is my note-taking: a short commentary that will
remind me of how I felt from that work
When people ask me the "what's your favorite x" question, I use the availability heuristic. I list off Neil Gaiman and JK Rowling
because I've read a lot of books by them and I own their work. And when it's
movies, it's whatever I saw last that I remember liking (right now that
would be Star Trek: the Voyage Home). I genuinely can't remember all of the amazing books, movies, etc. that I've been exposed to, and this really bothers me. They've changed my perceptions and values, but it's difficult to pick out specific titles. So this blog hopefully won't function [only] as a rambling journal of my opinions, but [also] as a record of what works of art impacted me and made me want to remember them forever.